The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, November 08, 1856, Image 3

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    11
IMMO
EMI
otq -.- ..):OuOtaL
Er
PofftiV I LLE . • PA.
s: . Y rrovsninEs
J pa-Tug etrculati of , th'e Magas
the aggregate circulation of any T
papers publiahediu the County—a lo nd
the Wit portion Of the popohttn,
ere ed In Us colossus is, of course,
advertiser Leif Pahtlatlealti any t
ear ther rates ored refitting
orteeT CisesocdfAg loth* circulation of
idfrruclu. uirrz Biz
_,..4.. .
Dim Mime .• Silt... aienissimaisim
ase, Fill- Fre Fill : 1 . '-'• ,Potitcwitle, NoirTeisaber 11, 6650's `.
ease mom moat mPne.
• The Oantity sent by Railroad this lest te 414-
_
.-
1 42 13 5 38 6 903 , 113tcks-4iCatial 98,769 00-Its the
.122 103 53 '5 69,763 06 tens. ;Totally' Ra115ia.1, 034 ,z 35 .13
•• 13 96 53 : 2 against 2,096,297 14 torsi--Po. ,by btanal 1,004,.
211 196 :79 . 1 25 920 07 agejnst 9E31,70 07 tons to same period
——• • last year. '; • '
.
612 530 223 - 38. The election hal interfered • conaiderahlY with
74 45 •18 • ••-• the t ra de this creek—and also the slack demand,
330 67 98 — 7 for some kinds of Coal. Red Ash still continues
1- 51 -- 103 -741 17' In demand from the New 'York Market principally,
182 's7 15 • 1 and also the choicer kinds of White Ash, which
5
110 29 , 1 are need for speciai•Porpous. The shipments this
270 87 96 week fall short of, those of last week 17,323 12
164 ''• 5 12 .
• •423 13 142 ...... tons—and fur the Corresponding ,;week lut Yea,
'6l •.3 25 12 7,850 04 tons. ' •• '
'B5 5 67' -, The weather flub winterish,.partniniarly in the
76 i 9 18 morningi, and two or three . Weeks! more will in
r'• P T Y' habilit close the shipment by CanaL
qt l2B
36 ,..39
,a ll ,. The price of the choice kinds of Coal we learn,
79 3 14
• ... —7
have advanced here 10 cents since the first of the
r.
26 15 ' ..,.. month. • . -- _
~ - •
151 '136 39 6 ' Noontime Ceentst• auutedv.—Thit portion
101 34 •23 • ._.: of the Northern, Central Railroad !aiding from
125 60 .144 7 ' Dauphin (where a bridge across the Sugnelninna
163 •. 9 • 138 2is Winding) to Millersburg, &distance of 26 miles.
-- L- 4 is completed. This portion of the Road con :
288 •69 2821 9 none with the Lyken's Valley Railroadat Millers
-85 13 4 6 burg, and also with the Dauphin and Susquehan.:
A 99 60 1 . 56 '- 5 .* na and the Central Railroad eight "rollas above
282 8 32 - , ,
173 12 52 ••4•-• flarristirg,•this opening a new millet Ai' the
•
nt
102 9 48 '
Be -Antl .racita Coal of the Lykens Valley .—•
'5 Coal of
.., • '
_ 69 74 . 33 , 4 The work is also progressing wean it Abe connee. l
203 4O 58 ' don with the Trenton 'Railroad,• and will he'
124 103 91 23 pushed through to Sunbury's' rapldlY•as possible.
82 3 7 — 1 - . 1 : Tea suspension of an extensive Coal Firm in',
4 4 -27 - Philadelphia on Saturday last, eanie4 soMe panic
106 ' . 1 - 2 in the Coal Market.. We* onderstachl the firm
132 45 \
2.. • '36 4 42 will make speedy arrangeinents to reit' emit again'.
224 147 71 The Suspensionwas caused by being ,cud denly
256 61 ,101 72 cutoir front; -facilities which they had relied on.
164 58 '59 24
192 21 98 ___.2l al
134 61' 69 29 a
—ter .....4 n
490 140 226 74- l:
>146 ' 37 -85 ''l c
214 ..6 •25
113 ,4 . 14 . in
141 5 , 34
I 140 49 28 ' 7. la
1 293 52 - 50 11
ti :
7035 2315 2188 367
4503 * 2315
a 503
{Middle .Ward,
a. E. Ward,
t 14
N. W. Ward,
°'' pont!' Ward,
Total,
Barry,
Blythe,
Branch,
East BrunswiCk - , — ; -
•West Brunswick,
Buller, .
Northern CMS,
Siathern Cass,
East Norvrniian, .
Yldrad,
leder,
-flunky,
Landingville,
Halianoy,. '
North Manbeim,
South Manheim, '
East Ward,
West Ward,
Total, I• -
Mount Carbon,
New Castle, _
NorWegian,
Orwigsburg,
Palo Alto,
Pinegrove Borough,
Pinegrove TOynehip;
Port Carbou,,•
Pon Clinton, '
Porter,
Itush,•
Schuylkill Hayen,
S. Clair
• {East Ward,
x orth Ward
1.44. d ll4 .
South. Ward
• ••- 4'
TOGO, •
Tremont;
Union,
per. 114notongo,
nahingtnin, •
Ei \ne, d
'ken Penn,
To ,
• •
•
253 .1
• ,f
Buolfnan'o majority over all, 21.11.5.
The vOto in the•iNincipit Boroughs was as, fbL
owl;
Pottovilo
Tamaqua -
'.3llinerovilla
St. Clair
• SchaylkllLifaven
Port Carbon '
. ,
Sea how Adrertieinienie under their uppropri
ire beide.
. . •
•
Ouhrpecial acknowjeddemeuts are due to the
iota. JAIL Ij. CAMPBEI. , t for a OUpy of Perry'a Ja- .
An Expedition. I
"E." of Tamaqua, was too lite for this' week.
We should be pleased .to Ilear from hir
Write earlier in the weei. .
GOVEII3OIOI 411).-11ftailltoo Adams of Broad
!fountain, has' been appointed an aid, with the
nnk of Lieut. Colonel, by Gov. Pollock. Wo con
irstnlato Col. Ad ..son his appointment.
:Tule 'New Yo: . Waticyr TutxX.—We est M
ellon to the pros . .. • hcs of .
A the New York Week
4, In another coha • •6. better paper in every
;Impact, is not pahliebed in theljnited States. IS
J onetaii are at rat In j advising Pennijlvanians to•
tike, its merits are io peculiarly excellent.
•
ELECTION Blots took place in New York, Bel-,
burs and New Orleans, on Tuesday last. In,
New York the fighting was between the Wood and'
le anti-Wood party. ;Several persons were in
grad. In Baltimore ft was between rowdy gangs,.
which pistols, musket* and swivels were used.
• .
.bou l t, fifty piracies were wounded, some, it is
• °Dila, mortally.
SiMLAO Fumwoftw.--The Tribune says; that
!r. Fillmore runs Cowart de' thd three. candidates
Penchant In his own city y .county and Stott:, is
In ,the it a' verdict against not
man, but the principlta he upholds. When be
for Controller In l 84 7) on Sue' Free Territory .
e, be'led his ticket arid carried. the State by
thousand,. • • , •
'olllotiLli LITERARY UCIETY.-A meeting of
tuombers_of the , Pottpvilln Literary Society,
ii bo bold at the 'officl!',of F. P. Donee'', pq-.,
Centre street siliove'llerwegian, On .Tuesday
ening unit, at '7 o'clock P. M. for the purpose
. organising fur the cotnincienson. AIDS st
gdatice:uf all the; members is earnestly 'request,
. ,u .... .
ATENTB.-.-Ili the lis list iisued from - thonited
• ter Potent Office, for the weal l
ending October'
h . , 18 5 6, and bearing' that date, we extract A r e
lowing:—
1 ; • .' ' 1 I
John Wilcox, of Philadelphia — Fo r , insPrOvt
tot in• metallic Pens. •
Wm. 11. Trissler and Jno. Stewart, o'f; Fairview,
L—For improved modes 'or sectiling sheet met
' covering for rO O 5. ' --- 1 - ''
i„
fancy 11. Ingham; of Cainptown, Pa. l —For im
torement in smut machines. ;Ante-doted Jine
4,1856. j , 4, '' .4
Co riitrsert . sfits..—lt mayj itiietest. pur breth
. 'el the press to know , th4t 'Dr. J. 0.1 Ayer of
Iseii,'(( . llprry Pectoral !int), Oathiirtin
twisted with him, hie brOther Frederick Ayer,
'l4 long and faverabiT known as a 'leading
erthant,of The West. Mr.. Ayer . will conduct
Ridely isitendid bisiness of thb firm; which
C re.i'ehee to the commercial 'ea tlons or bothr
spheres,.whiP3 the*Deepi will devetellimself
scientific lorestigntionn nod penult..—
.144 m
12.
10f
Id
it
ZEM
LIIA6D nrl7nsesnon.—Wo sends copy of the .
I.re Jors . roa/ to all.; the' subeeribera of the
I
id of frredoas, which et:moll/des the Cam.
Se paper. Should ;any of thosewito have tit
tle i4rafti sf frectioin desire IF:subscribe
the Miners' Jcerfoil t fie will be happy to enter
r cornet on'tUtr subscription list. 'the prinei
which will gorcrdrus ill' the fitUre will be found
unifier part of to-day's jJouritai. We Invite
ttlso who, approve of tho.le 11413,0111 u to enter
!isms On our subscription list.
bap
ate.
sod
own%
loll+
,or
3,JUND •INSTANCZ or Twit ErneApr or Bart-
T r% HOLLAND LI[TTEna.—N Itf. Poindexter,
rnion othe, ear :
Mme weeks since, being serionslittfel4 frith
• and uneasiness et the stomach, lam of lappet
,and at times strong syroptorna of.Dyipopshij
u induced to try yourIIOLLAND
I feel it but en act If Justice to the drticie, as
12J feille . good of those who may be Alfred
'like derangement of the vtomneb, late
t the use of ono single bottle of / this mediettws
ad, or localc)alablo benefit; having freed the
-ash from all sense or depression, end removOd
Typil.totir of Dyspepsia k would alio re
tiSat two alum metnhers of My.fansily, who
afflicted in a' similar manner with. myself
entirely relieved by the Us of a single hot-
w:
ov get.
nis
iNTUIZENECO.I3M, •
The Igniting Candidate.
!Col. 'Fremont had as many:friends' as _the
4 EI Liniment, the opposition could not draw
' , Polar' guard, Mr.
„Frenion t remarked, in
4stehes to Presidentliilmore, while tease
bos's'es and eattle over the plains of Mei,
"no l i if sic Goocilaasia 'could send on a
' ,l4o ;ipply of irastaug"Lioioiene, it woad ware
Wit. of kis tosses." This livery important
elyiqnsers and„, Liverymen to know. The
ag Liniment Is s- wonderful article for man
It should always be used for Sores,
Btili Joints, Ilurni,Brnises,Rbenteatlo
ks , , and for Galas, Sprains', Slitting; Mall—
upon horses. .• tienniie 0f 4 140 1 Is sobl by JAL regrettable deader,
".*ll. BARNEA '4 PARK; '
Prolirlito,n4-New York."
'Xii;
Tun Ransil Tutsoirans.:.:.-ihe, Frei State
prisoners at Lecompton, are : sisffering all the
horrers of the,.laquisition, loihoir small, loath.
sane prison. One has, died, end otbers,are not
expected to survive. What has been these men's
Mime 7. They are guilty ofldefendiag themselves
against the banditti from Missouri, who overrun
theliterriteri, plundered and !Punts -down their
dwellings, insulted their Wires and danghters,und
t murdereit their husbands and • fathers. 'Eighty.,
ono of them ire lying in prise= at Lecompton; on
trumped up charge,. or murder, awaiting their"
tr i a l, w hiehis flied foi , the first of April next !
The rl . ere power Is fast converting this country
into* dispotlim; for it is seldom that !Ina an out.
rage is committed under the color of the law, in
any rt of the known world.
Jorsiat. titles! to
RI A," pother haslisn
it circulate among
advertisement in.
Mb as moeh to the
other papers. In
• always guided In
he paper. •
THR COAL TRADE.
far ETU
Means. Shultz Brother, Coal Operators in Ibis
Region, have failed. Their liabilities over and
above the assets, we learn are considerable.
-- THE PERIM:MO? or THE ROADIRO RAILROAD
Coarsra.--Ata stated meeting of the Board of
Mai legit." of the Philadelphia and Reading Rail
road Cetrapen' y_held at Its eine° in Philadelphia
on Wedneiday last, the resignat*
.of Jona
MOIRA, Rsq:, was accepted, and It.; D,Stru.mir,
Esq:, unanitilusly elected President of the Cam
• • .
pany.
"'While it would be difficult - to find alentlemis
possessing the peculiar OHIO and peraorfalvpop-
Warily, which are Mi. Tuelter's, in an 'eminedi
fiegree,.yet no gentleman cat ld hair been select
ed to ineeced Mr.Tuaker, more- capable or filling
the position of President of the Reading Railroad
Company, than It. D. Cullen, Edq.• Mr. Cullen
yossesses s eterling busineis qualities, and an t inti,
f mate knowledge of; the details of the road's icon
`.omY, which enable him, to feel at home in hl4 new
and important position, from, the:start.. Ii has
thd7'advantisge of a number of years connection
with the road: •
lilthetigh.not enjoying the pismire of a per
sonal acquaintance with Mi. Cullen, yet we have
heard higtr:encomlums
.bestewed .upon
is a little; blunt at
,first, but we understand be
improves vainly on acquaintance, and is, ac
knowledged' to he's thorough, practical business
man: While the Trade therefore, learns with nn;
feigned regret of the resignation of Joao Tucs
al4 Rtat., it congratulates itself that bit smaesiSor
is fully equal in ability to the importance of the
•
position to which he has been called.
OPENING cli•A llzw COAL Roan.—On Wedges
'day, 28th ultimd,tho Barclay 'Railroad and Coal
Conspany'is road; from the pool above the Tewan
'da Dam.:(Bradford County, Pa.,) to the mines at
Barclay Summit was formally ; opened.. The cer-,
°monies incident to the occasion, were pirticipsi
led in by about one hundred and fifty persons.
• The. Coal lands of the .Barclay Company .e.ora-1 .
prise two thousand acres. The Coal, which a
'semi-bituminous, le mined by drifts from a vein
fivaleet s seven incisei thick, exclusive of 'slate.—
'At the-drifts` mouth, the grade of the railroad ii
1228 feet above sthe grade at the Towaniias,dans.-;- ,
Thelength ell the road being 161 Miles, the Coal
must ef . eourse, in this diatancte, be parsed down
1228 feet fraui the mining and to the 'shipping
end of the road. The manner in which thede.
scent is accomplished le at once simple and effec
tual—sate and mechanical-attesting the profes
sional skill and Practical sense of the mind that
planned and superintended the Constriction of
the ticirlf. With , one .lirtomotiiis,. the Cotipeny
can deliver into canal boats at Towanda, frdm the
drift's month, 375 tons of Coal per day, and with
five locomotives • they could deliver almostlive
times' that quantity every day.
From Towanda, ', beats loaded with Barclay
Coalean distribute their cargo - along thou lines of
all the canals of New York ; and as the Barclay
Mineis tic farther east and north. than. any other
semi-bitotbinons Coal Region, they are nearest
to the great east and north market&
The organization of the Barclay Railroad and •
Coal Company•is ! , thormigh and complete.:- The
contmetore whollifilt the 'road are Victor E. and
dthteph R. Piellet Of Bradford ,county. •'s •
The above facts, we glean from a report of the
opening of the road, in the last number Ohm
Pennsylvania Railroad and Alining /Orgies!.
Coal tint* Acetattars.--4 blue-book . , publish":
ed on Saturday list, contains• the reports of the
\ Inspectors of coal mines to December, 1855, pre
seated to Parliament previou s to the prorogation
in July , ! and-then ordered printed for the in
formation of the public— in the three counties of
Durham, Northumberland and Cumberland, dis-'1
ring the half year 'ending; December 31, 1855, 79
accidents are reported, of which 18 womb shafts,
11 from explosions, 27 from fall. of stone and
coal, and 23 from sundry , eauses. In South Dar
lam, between Deeerither t 3t, 1855, nod March 1
1856, there were'eightletal accidents in collieries.
'ln the Lancashire,, Chdshiro, and, North Wales
district, 165 aceidesits occurred in 1855, against
178 in 1854,and the number of lives lust in 185 5
was 199 against 299 in 1854. Twenty-nine of the
neeideutalast yoaf aroso_from the fire 'dam p
_ ex
; plosions. In the : Couuties of York, Derby, Notts.
Leicester, and Warwick, during the year ended
- the 30th of 4004,1850, the number of aceidents
. was 108 agnine . ll3 in 1853-'54, 1191n11852-'53,
and 140 in the year-1801-'O2. In the half year
ended 31st of December Jae, the number of deaths
was 02, of which 10 were caused by firedamp and
suffocation.
The report of Mr. T. Wynne, the Inspector of
Coal Mines for the. Staffordshire, Worcestershire
and Salop district, fur 1855, exhibits a lsmenta
bly heavy list of ma:sullies producing violent
dm:his - confirming the opinion .by him formerly
expressed that teething but stringent legislation
can stop the current of carelessness sand indiffer
ence to the loss of life that leads .to _ so many fa.
till accidents." There were several explosions in
the year, causing 38. deaths. The.- gross total
number of 'accidents , in the sontb•western district,
during thdyeir. /855 amounted to 181, -causing
200 deaths. "Mr. : Matthias Dann,' the Ocivern
meat Inspector otiklines: for 'tho'Nortkof Eng
land, deduces,' from 'certain facts. se i ne safer
gtiardfi for preventing boiler explosions, which
stem to deserve attention. 'lt would appear that
tuba ' hollers are mono' liable to 'Accidents from
overheating than ordinary beile're ' • awing to the
small quantity of water above the tube, while the
h most intonse-helting takes
that
when short of
water, sad practice shows that little or no ndva n. !age is derivable [rad the
_ ri pplieatien of a tube.
London Times. .
1,403
- 930
Mil
- 490
444
341
Dr.u4ottaNAL concluded my last letter on
"the 'abject of Shafts) with; an • instance of a col
liery, visited by me in the 'Bituminous district of
South Wales,Wheni eke shard of inconsiderable
depth, averaging about 100 feet, Were completed at
she:pease of less than &thousand dollars lob those
6 and 8 feet in ,diameter,' and a little Over 111200
for those .18 feet by 10. This being at the rate Of
86 50 per fout,t.' for the narrow . pita, and about
'sll 60 for the *bier ones. . • '
.Fiere,then, et`shis colliery, ere scceo openings
• to the obtside air—not including the "levels,". of
which there are several driven in on the erop of
She •velne. , -.const listed for less than orts-twentietk
of. the expense, that would ordinarily be incurred
in'. the' Newcastle bistript, for sinking a single
shaft of 900 or 1000 lees in depth. .1f anywhere
then, hero at least, the ventilation should Fe
ebundantiand • that in reality it is so, may be
fudged when I etatti t that .through this net-work
of mines which compose Ilhyteney' colliery, there
made to circulate a curfent of 200,000 edit!,
feet of air per minute.
Many of the - Shins in °the North of Eillaked,
hiive cod betwe, e n $260 and $300,000, and Mete
sic some Instants/.er - Shale baying god more
Limn double that aum, • Mace,' where sale-an
enormoueeepeose must be enceenterettilt Oland
bet expected that many should be stink—aud me
i
EUROPEAN .CORRESPONDBNCR
[r ran xuxm• , loeu.u.},
.' Letter No. AA. :.
"SHAFTS."
MIE=E=I22I
MSS=
' - • s - 4
coidiogly:vo fad Shia oils.- °arta' the oituride two
thefts are mutt te-answerfor the labels eitablish
away though" ft.. ot.iy extend oink ; hundreds of
vars. - Tbe llowgill oollieri for. Instagoe s ie over
2000 acres in extent. ' •
'ln these casott, the eleincnt of great depth is of,
assiAtance in facilitating the ventilation, for,
while in the ewe of ilbytaney • *hove there
were seven simile with Az furnaces, - - reqUirod to
produce a ventilation of• 200,000 cubic feet per
minute, in the Hatton' colliery of the- lorcirth,-*
single abaft 900 feet deep with three furnmiter, 11
competent to prodnee * * current of 140,900cuble
feet of alt in a minute , AW the Goal pon sumet
in the latter case i . Much - .
'Bat it is not the els:mind of depth only, that is
the cause of the enormous expense of these pits
in. the Nesiestatie region, but, the - ebutulattess of
water and quicksand met In 'sinking ihistn*. In
many other , districts, of England, you ere told
that shafts can be put down upwards of 600 feet
for $4 00 or $5 00. per foot, which would make
the entire cost of achaft about ,$5OOO. some
of therMidland ponnties, -- ,the cost of a shaft of
600 0;4 Jeptb, beginning from the first, would
not c coed $lO or $l5 pa' foot, with masonry,
About $OOOO would complete such:a shaft—no
quicksauds and feeders of water being encounter.
ed---and no iron tubbing, or at least very little
being required.. : .
Throughout other pasts of England, shafts of
Meet diameter, and 600 feet depth, are ordinarily
'nulls and walled for $5 per foot, and one of 11
feet diameter for about $8 per foot.
The "Cannel Mine" at ItunshaE, Lancashire,
which .I visited, cut $lO 00 per foot for sinking
—the depth being 600 feet. In this, there was
considerable cast iron tubbing,. jointed with tim.
ber-60 yards in all—which is , not included.=
The Pendleburi mine, near Manchester, which I
also visited, is, 1560 -feet steep. The two shafts.
npeast, and downcast, of which one . was lined
with iron tubbing to within 400 feat from the bot
tom, / was informed, had cost, inclisding pumping
engines and all machinery, no less than 12.00.001
In South StaffordsAire,• the shafts, usually of
slight depth, small diameter, and encountering no
water,
are sunk at an astonishingly low rate. One
which - / descended near 'Dudley, to view the
"thick Coal" 'bed, had cost less . than $2 75 per
foot—the depth being 360 feet, and the diameter
6 feet.. I have. even been informed, that in this
district, shafts are sometimes sunk-and walled to
the depth of a hundredfeet, for as low -as £1 a
a yard, or,about $1 82 per, foot.: Sachs pit, I
wee Informed by a mining engineer in South
Wales, would there cost three times as much, or
about -$5 00 per,foot. He bed visited Stafford
shire, but could not. understand how they were
stink so cheaply. -
In - -no part of England do the difficulties of
quicklands and water—requiring pumping, tub
bisig, and all the% expensive and compliated en
gineering of shafasinking—appear to be met with,
as they ere in the Noith of England.
There, where feeder, of water occur, sometimei,
as in this case of Haswell mine, giving forth . 1000
galioni:per mtante from a single feeder; where .
meta: "tubbing" is often required to be blurted.
,as in the case of Hatthn Winning, for a length of
500 feet. the expense is often vastly beyond
what would be due to the greeedepth alone.
It has been Stated by Nicholas, Wood, a dis
tinguished Mining Engineer of the Earth, to show
.the effect of these difficulties in inereasiagthe
ex
pense, that at:Seaton, in the Newcastle district, a
shaft sunk. by ;him, cost between $250 and $3OO,-
000 t ac '
including mhinery, "wherein', a pit about
•
two utiles distant, cost mnela more thandouble
that sum." .
It may be interesting to append a list of 'a few
of thiontimerogs collieries in England, that ex
cord 1000 feet in 'depth. .21fonktrearmoed, the
first of these, is the deepest Coal mine in theliing
dotn; and though not the most costly one, is said to
have required-en eipenditore Cute short of *500,-
000.
LIST 0040 OP TEE roams:muss Is ENGLAND rill . -
: v 11 3111 1.C2kD 1000 PACT IS DElyril
Monk'sremand),
Asbtou-coder-Lyno,
Pendlebiiry Colliery , .
Deardon, DtMal6l,
- ,
Arley Mine, Ineekell,
South Helton,
Dukinffeld Colliery, Cheshire,
Dowgill, Pit, ,
Castle.Stlen,. •
But even the largest of. these must yield the
palm to the almost tabulons copper mines of Corn.
wall: That is the land of depths, where the cau
tions Tribnter follows the shining lode down into
the foundation Granite, wherelhe mineral vein,
instead of lying fiat, or nearly so, like a bed of
Coal, shoots . almost vertieally , tow;rds the centre
itf- . -the earth, and its Table to man forever, is
bounded only by' his power to follow it, and the•
expense of raising it to the surface. It is there
that we fintshafts of really magnificent-depth.
Freasarean Copper mine its /11.2 feet below the
'surface, and 1700 below t/Mierei of the sea.
anstris rs THE ANYBRAEITE LEGION oi. SOUTH
WALES. it
In this, themosi considerable Anthracite Re
gion of Europe, shafts are neither so frequent nor
of such great depth u in the Bituminous districts
of Wales And .throughout the,Kingdom. The
beds of :61MI, inclined at a dip of 9 to 12 inches
in the . yard, ,or nearly kin 3, are worked' oat
chlattly bylevets, often in slopes as in Schuylkill
County, and only occasionally by perpendicular
shafts These however, whera•not necessary for
raising the Coal, are frequentlymink for purposes
of ventilation,
The rocks consist of - shale bard eendstone;
mixed ground, tireelay, and `
what are .knorn, lo
cally, as "cliff" and "ward." Interspersed with
' these, the veins and belle of ironstone are. re
inarksbly'abundant, and the beds of Coalihough
not averagint—with the exception of one called
the "18 feet vein"—mere than perhaps 3 'feet in
1 thickness, are numerous and close together. A
section at Yoiscedvtin, disclasea 20 beds of An
thracite, 64 feet thickness altegetber,ill a vertical
reach ofstrata ;
of 450 yards. , .-
None of the eollieries in li(ts region have been
very long ppened, and — as Anthracite Coal has
hardly'yet succeeded in forcing its way into favor
in Great Britain, the mines of thal invaluable
fuel in 'South Wales have none of them, as yet
, reitched a very great extent. The deepest pit in
the tlistriet is not perhaps over 600 feet from the
eurfao. .
Let us now proeeed •to inquire at what cost
shafts are sunkin this region, which, containing
as it doer a much larger area of Anthracite Coal
than,exista in our country (however backward in
comparison the English operators may have
proved in its•developement), must always be pos
sessed of great interest to Pennsylvanians. ,
At Yniacedwin, (the scene of the experiments
of Crone, to' whom is generally conceded the
praise of being the first to use Anthracite with
racems in the manufacture of iron,) the veins of
the Entre-Lodi! Collier', are 'reached by "level,"
rine and i half miles long.- This level comment
rates to theeurface sonic distance in, by a shaft
240 feet deep, and 15 feet by 10 in diameter. '
-The shaft I was told, most about $8 25 per foot
of depth for sinking alone.
At Yetilifera, in the same vicinity, two sha ft s
were being sonic at. the time of my visit, to a 4
feet seam of Anthracite, 90 feet from the surface.
• One of thesembafts, a'hundred and twenty yards
distant from the other, was intended for an upeast,
and wilt be need exclusively for the air and for
pumping. It. is only 6 feet in diameter, while
the downcast shaft Is 12—an arrangement that is
by no mean. philosophical, as the passage for the,
return air should invariably be greater than thet
for the fresh air. •. •, .
To win out tbo shaft and freo :it 'from water
daring the progress of the'linking, an en
gine of 25 horse power was erected, with' which
tbey expect-to "wind"-, 100 tons of Coal' daily,
on tbe completion of thalworke, and do the pump
ing in the night. ....The shift is walled with stone
and brick, two and one-bolf,feet in thickness;
the brick is a course of 9 inches, lining the Stone-
Work towards the shaft, and the wellis raised 15
feet above the ground to allow for the tip.
This shaft, 12 feet in diameter and,•9o feet in
depth, will coat, when finished, about ''ss 00 per
foot, or nearly $5OO in all. . \
A short distance below Yetilifera, in the same
Swansea-Vale, a new shaft was being sunk 600
feet in depth, to thq,"Red Vein" of Anthracite, a
yard thick.' It la of elliptical shape, 14 feet long
and 9 wide, and was expected to cost $lO 00 per
foot, or $6OOO for the shaft.'
In the valley of "Ctim-Tyrch," near Ynisoed.
4 win, et the colliery of Messrs. Swank Brothers,
the agent told Me, the expense, including walling
with'brick, of a shaft 6 feet in' diameter and 400
feet in depth, was. about $5 00 per foot.
The Ystilifera 'Coat mine, one of thee/Ifrom
• which is drawn the suppl-of fuel for the 11 An
thracite furnaces of tbe,Ystllifera Iron Company,
is 480 feet in depth. The pumping arrangements
hercero vrerthy of notice. The ' pumps are in
two.lllls, The first, 10 inches diameter, extends
180 feet down to a sump or reservoir, where the
other, 8 inches in diameter h , commences., and ex
tends 300 feet lower to theoliotttitn. The "buck
ets" are 6 inches Tong, and the' iron rod which
works the bottom one, 300 feet in length, is an
inch and a half thick: The "water level" at the
bottom, 480 feet from', ground, is 6 feet high tutd
6 riltio, being driven at this' time :tet a length of
about a fourth of a mild. The engtne.performlng
the winding and pumping, 1.1 ono of 3D horse.
-- power; the latter part of Its duty it performed at
—night or when off work.
This shaft, 8 feet by 10 wide and. 80 foot deep,'
cost about $lO per foot for sinkin alone. i
At "Waters ' Colliery"-in the ea e vieinty—the
shafted' a newly peened mine—wa 10 by 13 feel in
diameter and 570 feet deep. Abe cost. was $lO to
SR per. foot for 'sinking. -• The walling was of 1
brick 9 inches wide,' and the t fo r banding
t ;
alone 64 cents. per perch. Th with the cost
of the brleksend other expensee connected with
the yotirk, would amount to rather over $2 00 per
toot of.depth, for a)wall of this ature And air.
eumference.
• In einking,:the wall le builf on - Iron-curbs
. which encircle the shaft of eonven entdepths, end
until the solid math; met, area ' nded by Iron
rod* from the surface do . going own, the wall
l is thus carried on 'with. the sink .It is-sap= t i n
ported on these curbs, which are. the I. ' , her,
(.'being uprighiof the 'being 3 inc hes and the base
2 incites) and occur at interrnlit of,ebemt, 12 feet
vertleaL On reaching tbe solid '•. rock. it eurik Is
inverted on 11, and the wall taille;np to meet the
next earbebove. ' - • •-. .
The cost of sinking shafts in 6 a pert of South
Wales, observed .to me the Mini g Engineer at
Yniseedwin. Is variable, arid de ds on the.water
end ogler conditions, but it may ' taken at an
average of $8 ea or $lO 00 . perf of for tAe- e.OO.
ratio; alone i the matotirj or we ling is nsusilly
•t feet, thickitna.at stalk. It ii do eat the rite of
, $4.00 per Cubit; yard. ! W. J. P. ,
• • -- , ' [To be Conttettted. • - - ..
t .
NEY.* ronx•CoAL Xmas., Nosember 6, 1856.:
—.The demand ter Domestic bee lipt, been suites*
attire as on the preview weak, it 4 Vint -fa 4 .1 1 I.;
tribe tett tothe-triild weather and la. elenfleti•—•
The receipts base increased, and are noir fit ea.
;.sees of lastlear• Pcieh Orchard, to In L ittocitind
at
~ , . • . or, sato - : ego. ,s , •
35 . 5 @si 25i • u . iii4" Li -l' lSs' iti
,g , , , ,55 25 lerleltigb."_ Stieklisitutnels'sfetadi rind
. in good deata‘iiii-for ship - p 1440.. toreigaia obi
abacidint; dad triee3 are wliheutliangill4 it - otei
1.,
=SE
"'~-:~rr~a .rr a:.~;:+~G"~sna.; ~<c w7ot,~rcMs~at'•
Feet Deep
1800
'lBoo—
1488
1290
1242
1212
1200
1100
1038
sates of orrei ,J i n a
sales of.ved... 458.46.6
Can*acslo . 25;thOli iit;ss, 110 - sif
Sidney it $5 45, 4 Moil;
• sir _Tzt•EonArn. - _ ~
- Patrias, 6
/*eggs/Km Riditiid to—
Ne sr York, • - '
Hodes. •
Nog • •
*Maly. • • • • "
Wes, -• • -
• • '• • • .• ,1 SF
- - - 1,010110
6,-
• by
Poi the weak =din Tipindi7 last:
DIWWW2I
On . tbe Yi6A . 5. •
. .
Philadelphia, • • . , . • 1,(40 06
al 4*
Trenton, • . , .110100
Jorsei,ati• 4 • • • • • • 170 00
Now ork and - • - • ? 10
Troy, •• I • .. F 4 172 00
T o 4 lo * swag., - ~$2.7flP OS
By Sall It*** and Csagel: •
Quantity of OM sent by halfroadl wet Ositilifof; the
weak endtag on Theirsday eveshig • ,
Port Carbon, 13,314 13 . , 8,963 00
BebajlPottarills, 1,411,16 ; 1,430,00
Ilayen„ . .
.18,am 16 1 8 444 02
Autumn,. . • 893 01 OW 00
Port Clinton; 4,726 09 8,063 06
• - - 40,993 19 767178
• 40,99318
Total for the mask, , . . tons, 6%166 06
Total by Rained In 1!1 . 16, 1,951,235 13
Canal Tota l by atrial and Seine., •
,t one, 1,239,166 00
Shipments to cams period lad year: -. • - •
By Ranned," 44.701
,040,2crt 14
By Canal, - t wyei 1 5 , n 1,130.07
Trollo 01
,
050,146 40
Decrease In 1050, so far, tons; WV= 01
Schuylkill Cssouty
' The following la the quantity of Coal transported over
the different Baltroadsin Sehniikfillhanty,for thelasah
oultog on Thursday ironing last : .
Mina UM and S. 11e : ren U. U., 36,672 60. 1;4 33 , 405 18
Itt.thirbok " 4,01018 170,21.6 08
I:Schuylkill Palley • " 11.017 08 384,250 06
ilt.'tn-rborr k lot Carbon . 16,405 07 612,764 07
111t1 Creek - • " 13,636 14 638.367 00
Uttla.Bckkylklll • u 10.= 10 591,47816,
Rates of Toll 'and Tr noporSation on
NAIL MAIM tffs . , ,
YLCarbon. S. Haven. PLC/Won. Albums.
To Richmond, $2 00 •11 95 $1 80 slls'
To Mind's. 190 - 185 ; ITO 165:
Springl 65 1 60 1 45 1 45
Reading, , 140 1 15 105 105
Rates of Toll by Canal for the present.
Noss PL (Luton. IL anion. B. Hsoes. Pt. aisles
To Mad's., 80 - 79 - .: 77 - 63
Spring Mills,. •70 ''' 69 67 ' 60 •
Norristown. , 65 •64 .
Raiding. r 48 ._,f 41 , ' 47 - , 45 . - ' i
Antes of Freight by Canal . I
-.Ate. of YeeWit by Calmat
To New Taric 4 : " sfalf '' "re s.
To ;1.11w... soU 80
.
Pelimas, and Iteilsoa'Co , a Coal Trod!!
. • MOIL • ' mat,
For tbs last week, • 16,105 465.829
lko same Ualoiest year, 612,198
•
Decrease -so fir, • 66.790
- • Pewits: Oval Gets Coal Trade.
VAS. ' ?mai,
For the last week, . 21401 629490
To mime time bud year, • 416,210
Inerease mo tkr.
•Ilerstutein Cord Trade tear "October.
Zest towards Ns. York; 22,346 16
West do do 20,848 Il
Total,
-- L - ehigh-Coal.Tvide for 1836 by viola.'
—9for - tue treik - endtag on Saturday teat: •
toes
Lehigh Goal and Nay s .oo: Cut. Sons. Cwt.
Summit Mines, 01- 8,039 OS 261,855 06
Room Run do. 1,982 10 67,622 10
But, Lehigh Mines, • 1,287 09' 29,403 00
A. Lathrop's Pea Coal, 1,315 00
/Spring Mountain Mina,.. . 8,010 14 84 6 30 .•
Bast Sugar Loaf do.. • 1,761. 01 60,382 08
Colerala, ' 2,660 06 61 0 8 0 17
Stafford. - • 30 17 ; 10,847 06
N. Y. Lehigh Coal Go., - 11 03 S 6 7f.. 18
German Pa. do. do. 410 -- 05 ' 90,814. 00
South Bp'g Mountaintigge, ' 800 09 . 23,112, .lb
lialletou Coal Co. • = 3,933 /3 /2480/ 0 6
cranbeny Mina,' > . 2 , 160 09 67 578 18
Diamond " ,--' 1,739 01 42,471 04
Counel Ridge, - 1,660 18 46,738 1111
Burl Mountain Co., !. 3,404 02 89,936 04
Wilkosbarre Coal Co. • ; 601 / 1 16,385 /1
Wyoming Coal; - 1 402 07 12,428 18
Hartford . 4 587 07 0.370 11
Lehigh
To .
Valley SLR. 1: 34,978 16 1,004067 09
Week ending Saturd47 last,
Wm. MMus a Co,. • j 2,214 02 79,704 01
Ratellff a Johnson', 20 07 -. 2,744. 01
Patter, Carta* Co., . 9,299 14 30.073 12
N::Y.a Lehigh, 438 10 11.443 00
Sharpe, Lelarnstaii a Co.l 099 18 7,701 10
Gomm Penna. Goal 00. • ! 643 06 '
.4494 08
Dobbin It Debassa, • 361 01
Total,
By Cana],
84,916 16 1,064,037 09
_ .
Or 1 1 60 1 reek,,_• IMO/ /210 0 .418 08
Same Urns last par, (mem); ot tAromi, 02
""'-1 28.641 00050 , 0613
Inertias* In 1856, WI
ib►daaaafirbyClad hr' ,
Union Cana! R. it.Oeial Trailiptortaileu
/amount transported during the month 01 Oct. 1860:
Unloiatanal
ilwatart Railroad,
s:lunabeirlatatl Ocial Trade, 188.
yam. TOTAL
For the last.inek, "18,474, - 691,500
jut year, 18,353 649,5;1
Increase in 18101.10 tar.;
ff — atm - VA vi s
TOE. NEW YOBS WEEKLY TEM
Literary iewl•Neers Anneal tbs the lamily
:aniairesidel
The Cheapest Newspaper is the United Sates.
UON the termination of the , Presidential contest, new
close at hand, the proprietors of the New York
Wen= Toms intend to introduce miens and extensive
changes in itr. charticter, which will render It still more
attractive to the great man of the people of the United I
States. Its columns will then be less exclusively men- ,
pled by political news and dinars:ions, and will be much I
more largely devoted to Literature, General hews, and ;
interesting illecellanerous Reading. It will be made em
phatlcally andespecially a
AVerespaperfor the randy and /fret ,ide
Containing Literary Tales, Original and Selected; Bio4
graphical Notion', Sketches of Character, Letting from
Abroad, Aneedotes;and generally whatever will be most
entertaining and most instructive to the greet mass of
newspaper readers,
Among' Among , the tonspkvous attrectkeis of the Willa
True will be
AN ORIGINAL NOVEL,
By a popular American Author, Written eglratsktor .
Its columns, and abounding in interred and merit. This
wilt be published' in successive numbers, ongunintring : ,
about the 15th of November. and will pratehly be. com
pleted
in six months.
The Wm= Tim will also cantata a series of Letters
from Europe and the East, by one of the ablest and ..",LAIRCADIAN4NSTITUTE. . • ~.
most popular writers In the United, states,-embracing 1 rrtilbi Illatltiltioll Is located in a quiet
'Notes of Incident_ , Adventure and Observation in Ea- i and Wind village. surrounded by the freedman
rope, Egypt. Arabia and the 141 y lind, and fermingone i try scen.ery to be found in the State. , It is nevertheless
of the most Interesting mien of Foreign Sketches ever , easy of acceell. being within two miles of the Philadel
publishertin thin country.
_____,./ 1 phia and Reading Ramat, to and from which o stage
Besides these continuous Articles, prepared one - sm ll runs twice a day. ".
ibr the new series of the M . gsgt t Tao, it will con tain, ' The male and female pupils room and simple serpent.
it
every week, a great amount of AND 1 betiding*, but meet at the same table, It being thuoltht
ORIGINAL CORRESPONDENCE,' DOMESTIC AND / A
asaantagems to both to horn that easy and grafted pct.
FOREIGN. : atoms' which may thus be ecquired. I
MISCELLANEOUS LITEILAET !ANECDO T ES AND The Philosophical Apparatus Condsts of Ware era
SEETCUES. i
I of the latest and most approved styles. ,
NOTES 011' SCIENTMO DISCOVERY., A library, purchased expressly for the nee of Eh ate
.
BIOGRAPRICAL AND CRITICAL NOTICES. ...
Choice Or NEW AND VALUABLE 800/OL .2 stitute. Additions are made to the number of volume's
choke Poetry, original sad Selected, At., Ac., 40., wr.- every year. - '
In short, it is th e design of its * proprietori to ePlite ; Pupas ought to be provided with verylittl I paid mo.
r either expense nor labor in making It the reed desirable ' nay. Whateyea• they wed- cm, always tke obtained
and interesting sriscelhosernes Lamely ArewePalwr 01 Gtr: through, the Prindpai, but fends must invariably ie do
United States. ' posited in advance for meeting such demands." !Each
- In addition to Its Literary and Miscellaneous character, student should be provided with a Bible, a few Petrels,
the Weimar Thus will give, in a clear and condemed napkins and ring, an umbrella.* pair of slippery - black
Veen, • • r
I lug and shoe brushes. All articles of clothingshould be.
_. ' ALL VIE NEWS OF TRE DAY, . 1 narked mitt The Thu ,., a/ me „ my. .
Fromell quarters of the World, sad in all departments . The aiming
In ti Twaa,„--14"day, October
of activity --embradna , fOtt4and will continue IS stiont'Es. ) -
AGRICULivn.AL, covitEßcur, AND FINA N CIAL . •
roam: •
, ~ - • - , INTELLIGENCE, - - • i , , reniittal. etat Stunt&
Piertiared expressly for its columns, and for theruse 'of • D om a n Tab u , 404 a ga t . r , . I
those that' parts of the country who wish to be Rept in- 1 1 . p w4, ' . VS 60. - $71.00
toned avowal' item tophn.... •• - , --,-,'" Latih and Greek, mitre, - • .--2 00 • ..4- 00 '
TILE DOINGS og CONGERS/ I ,f . limy • i . 011 Id 00
With a synopsis of add Impottant doenments, valuable ° swum aw e preach, each, , '5OO - :5 00
speeches, and tip proceedings of the Several State Legit , h emou ow Piano, ~- •. . -le 001 _2O 00
lateen. 1 - •' • , I • ILlee of instrumeret, ' ' ,2 00 I 4 00.
.P0R1P3.117 IPEIV_ ,' pupil Is received for it Issitime than one - Ruartet,
?As given in the Lettere of diecial C o and, To „„ mua „ redaction is. toads of them who enter
lo' xtracts front the newspaper press
,oc, England and a f‘, -- A a commencement of a carter „ T of m a w who
the Continent:-and ._ • ' •••• 1 Imre twos* the close eta quarter, unless rzetnaternd ore-
ME ATISMIZAYS OI7B NEWS fewsed illness it the caws. Poch sesslott hi divided Lebo
Of naidents,: Crimes, Disasters. Personal Movements , tiro quarters. • .
.s j u so o ffil A . m.
de.. le., both at home end abroad. i °Totowa, isg a tember 28,16 , 1 i
The WSSILT Tours will also Contain Editorial Articles; i •
disclosing all the leading events of the day, In such a i -_____aamattliallmak
manner as shall promise to be most, widely mend and ;
instructive. In Its politiesl dipartment the Tim tiV I
be treaty independent of oft Political ,ftreties, speaking t •
freely and boldly its owiropleions,--cotahatmlng rattle' .
teen and Perlis bodied for Whatever may be wrong, =di
ii- ,
OM ding arid sustaining them In hateee,may tend
fur Ca ac of t.M piddle good: It Will asivol ODCIERS,.ENT 4% CO/S
rate lad end egad illative to all esenr-the presorval , . siguagt RAILING WOR1110.”
ticas the Union upon the principles of the' M
- RODGEMS,ENT A CO.. taanuereturen
lion, and the improvement of the condition of dicimes, torte, of Cut and Wrought . IRON RAILING,
by Education, Moridlty and Religion. It will wage no I, r t ,l I - 1 how: eraser, eterkeiption, invite the attention
war upon any esiltk• o r nor enstrtenOceantltddletsm ant 'i, . i. 77r rr -,--,..- of the public to their branch of business,
of the conelltutional sigh - bloke% Mallen of oar 0 001 -. \ • - "w`, ' which Is conducted in the building for
mess country. Bat it, will also t all attempts tOatth- i mar y occupied by Butt are Conch In Coal street; Potts
entreats. Dreamers! Sand to - tot ildnirldnilliatb or to "'I tillorrounn• ' ~_ a..... ' .
deamine those great principles of Human Liberty which j They can trireme Pseudo, seclile-Wpek Ibr Artois;
form the tads and tbundation Of our etrimbiken lust!• i de:, Viewer Trainess,Tree Boxes, de:; in every variety of
station. It will,he smarm butane in its tons,- , etsia;_r agai ta:43 ase as, copartimung and Sara Netting
lug to convince rather than Intimidate, respectful to- !, °Lai k at Ohs stiortest notice and to the .., lowest
wards those who differs from Ar conservative In Its ten-; T eems, togs r with Iron Bodatead‘rann, Lot &Stier.,
derby, and devoted zealously and steadily tn . the der& , ' den Weems, Iltiglird, Duras Pence, he., de, below city
Usti and aulranosment of the people price& •._ m ',„. • _
zosigu l ,
The Maecenas& will be printed oPto tiambiatosla , , N. 13.--Geteryiots mail! 011 C 10000 . . " got
Per, In Wear tiro wad InslotAnt stro - elleil "mart eon' I up" to suit podomenr t Evertrthing insbeirilueolshand
taintali a l a s?Pageth °l.2 taT"War uguiw w w" - Presentint orordered, will be tarnished at the shortest notice.
every week a larger amount of dude& readlirg and news We see prepared to k, on undo of cleans, an& as
than can be obtained eberwheres at the same mt.,. It IJ 1 . ra u res d.o..,- ora t es i 50,,,,_ a s , ,
4 ,
designed to make it at ante_ --; - 1 , Yebnt . Gl,loo , - 7- 14vpr •'` '-'' "7 ' '
TEN BEST AND afILIPEE7' , . PAWL?" NiVIP.A. ..„, . ..„„..,
- . PER LIT THE UNITED SUM. ''.i ' •. ' w.utlf oulligit IMOTORY.4- ...-'
It TM be sent to itagerlben by mall at the %Weil* • •' • " Ote • ' ~,I•E••0 * 1. ' -
rates:. ' ' ' -,..- -f - l ll l'ne ' ; THE underkignqd . II AS.
One Copy,. 1 greaii OW - w' re wer 111 1 " chi. ~ ~ . ' use, proprietorship of
_the Vire
IPliws Copies. 'Omen ter a.' ' w -lo• • ' ~,1 1 . . , •.-
~,...
_, . ,• Factor, la Coal Mreet,.. /! 1 4• 1 / /ego-
TWilltrwFtWe m o Plltne 1 7weer OW • •ww , ''. .:111 `"--- ducted - hy 11. L. Cake, due:aroma
tachpickage mast hammy cue be sent to mu news, u ps r ,u m e Qom Operators an d Ab s p u bly desso mi s
and.addreSs ' An y 7•Eutaillr, dark, °I outer WI /A, Ito his exteutheerstatdistunent, Arran te sea
, who may send us ten or mare subscribers on the etas* i the n i sehitagoo k e s s 7 , beseoe ma awe 4es fa ,
term', and who will receive the package An distribution
, waT ) s s a iS Irma aategat will be filled at the Olterbot 1110:
among the intectibera r shall resin en actin copy.:. Ad-1 ties "4 on se ts mast sa terms, - I ,•
ditiol2llll3AY at any time he aced* to Clubs bythe patty , rb.. i bm ti .,.....,,... h . ga i mi k t t he
, il ar i ee s
In whoa name the Clutretende ! and OW twee of Bat rer , a t . oon h o en d " pin i one d nra b oaca b ri m s uts„ host r . l . 1
. i
6/11U W e e' `' '' '-' ' - '' - i gidl eusdnition or. kit Of bls aereena r pir
Pottage on the Woo Tlw Is: - • .„ ard tco u tet ,,...4 waw a. t i a 5 0,,,„.• am
' ToCanada r payable hotivence; -..-,, ' 28 oats* year. 7,. A A itgATir.A. s : 7
~ - 7 - inviN n A ,
;fable the &ate, - • ' Oriente a years . -='''"'"' ' - - ' - "' 1
Within the United Stab" -. ' . SG entail lan
. .
- - ,...._ . 4 ,_,_.,._' . ! • _ Wall, &II Ei iLiß t f• '';', 'i
' ,
• The Now York Dm* Turas, ts a very ......, ---vii... , • .
„cuing se,a*FSa Tres • wool_ ~.,
Deily piper, contskitssi all the dowse( the Day, he. as., !-- - - ' - --. • , -, o f -.
Which is sant to lilitiklibM br mu r al SW wais:o pee i-- 1 pr , b 4 , I n:" v oix , ilieoin emu zum u i, li i ii - e .
annum, ; • : ‘,..- f.,- • • .."' '-'%"- ' • ' I : ,1 41 X, I = - 1 BOOMS, Illyp.ar.i ii;luirn4l•9BolluYikUl
• The New York ILiaa-Wmatis TOW, *Mud tyke m a -•. ', Tr COetntY. • ~
werk,stut apish:dog all the reidlita matter alb, Usti, : ..i, •• CU-- luddiltiithiubiia o h o 6 ot ui
I.Y. is seat la initsarlbere at thank' et ThieeDellereper i -,, , . „ ott , , ;h . :41 . 5 ., Deuni ~... ~,,,...
imam Tao copktito one eiltrese tittles Dolan .. , , ~.- j'aZ io di taw ; '' — 13. 011 4 01 7,1 0 ,7` a;
. -, . • , 1-- . ~,, • . .., - I boars, ~ *ll mitt My ot kp s 'lnAllin l 44o4 0
Par 4 ent k ell " ma ", f l " , 2 , 7 " 741re ‘t 141.4114 1 ' 4 • Viet tio VOA itel ligkkeleti, . ~• •
admire*/ a n d tid iiii . iere wilt ivti , biult I Nittot4ii ;.„atiCtfft; Mum tAok di0t,it0.4 2 1914,*41 - oxisit
r _ c i A ipt (t i the - mosey. --** ' •. ' 1 rUes4 Wirt Mavis offgl%* **DOI t0r04,0 off
, All Jotters foaming song, otos boil oats 4441* ,dm tura odtttotoltopot lit,thl ia L i ft F v't.
- oltk tho Wilco, to itgioloot to the C 0.,- , Altiordortaatestill 4 •T• it. baltr,
,ItATIIM, iitsturr g L'1)• ti. *dash lf‘itherithiai Allots - 11 , ~,111!01. . ‘i y
. ' ' " Wean' NM* OM., Wireliktk. ' still W votototly attositod to. old tibreako4. - -
N '' bei I-6 - - - -'- svt, ' I ni 01 as •
...orm _. . - , .• - 7 , • •
.
, . .
NEW: AliVEttrgENTs
. .. ~ .
, xqettictiliftlisiticoisti--
prry=, SWAN' NECK. SLEIGHS,
itia itisexiiiclily palSod,pitl faltrinuoed:for
Az 4:B‘.e.rbuyea t ai. ,
41144 :'
Zioreutter 8,
tATENT. ADE Pap.eir
atm to had Lam t to 20 panda, Ibr Gtoateri, Drag.
aad °Mrs, Ow oh 17 GAIISIGII/613.
Nagifew 3.354
MMi
larneerive yoarriown ruideate Wie n . liey sit a* alma
ThHE subscriber bap' just retained t
aisortnwo t or Standard - and Atlaralianades
tbr Winter Shenhigremtaln& torrebeen pup
alum* at the Trade Bales, wheat the traveling books*
/era Maki their Putebaser and we feel ambient that we
=D WI our books ',lib better and nicee'dnrable,tintllng
quite ss amp as those offered at Auction by traveling
palms and booksellers. ' 11. ItiNNANi
, Wholesale and Retail BOoksefler and Stationer.
girlie/tool Books of every description In use In this
section: irbolavide and retail. ' Merchant; tenebeso and
garrotte irapptlert at the lovedratee. •
80HUYL.NALLEY PASIVR .TRAINS.
Winter ArptaireasenVw •
.. .
, ,
AN aid lair IdONlM.Y.Nemisber 1004 lase, ea.
debuyrkill Valley Paseetuptr wipe:eve as U
lm% - •
LIMILYO' Potting' at 140-A. PAL'
41 Thirster& -at 11410' " —a •
Pasiongen by thi 7.30 d. IIL Yr 4444 int take' tbit dittos
at Teammate? oa.alei thee* mune* ,Ith the
Clstawissa. and ElltinilbitpuTralsorld4l'
leaves Philadelphia* 6.1 L On Niagara VOL &e.
I Tare t Tosessuret- , sp ants:
Through tickets to Taussqua . 60 oast:
. Sip• Tickets procured to the Qtrs. - 1M
8.-WiIItZLER, Superlatestaelit.
Pottsville, 310Veseber . 'Oka
,
~
'"*l:A AI '.%
.
11 1 r‘l 1 1 . e'
', 111• ), 1,, ,
1
fl If 11 il
On their, Fourth Annual
Tour , respeetfUllp I n •
flounce
ONE CONCER7'.
is PottarilloodtheTOWN
lI&LL.onitATURDAY
Ett6NlNG.Not.Bth. when
then; will be aedsted by
Muter LEWIS, the tai--
'toted and swab: young 8010 Violinist; and twill pne
sent a choke "election of Opera clummoe, Quartette,
t3ono t ßallade, and Violin holm •
For patieulare, seerogranunes. Tiekets,ls
For sae at Boman* a Bookstores end at the
door.
air Doors open at concert to Commence at half
pert T. • . W. 84110311130 N. Agent. -
ItZ=l
=I
43,194 Of
ER
No. 282 North Second street, a ..ve
west side.
PHILADELPHIA;!.
November 8,1858 454 y
rLUABLE. PROPERTY for Sale.
house and lot now coenpled by ..TOhnit.
in Norwegian street,oolbet front by 110 feet deep;
Also, a 10t.20 by 110 het, now occupied by E. Dodkon,
adjoining the above. Term to snit yardmen
' JAS. A.INNIISS.
44 t . A. _•
SAUSAGE CUTTERS 'AND STIJE
, PERS.4.llrlght a Lerch were awarded premiums at
the Schuylkill Haven and Orwigsburg Pairs for the best
Sausage Cutters and Stuffers—wbtrlxAtey warrant. to.
give satlafaction, baring thevidiclusire sale of Wait-
W , mr a Co.'. Patent Iron Box, Saneage Cutters, which
ars rdl warranted.
Pottwrille,.oetober 1.2, '26 42-
•1,000 KEW AitD:
WHEREAS,: in, of it
"y y having been made known tathe subwriber that
some reckless person or persons did aritla - malice-afore.
thought circulate rumors to the effect! that Fashionable
Bats, Caps and Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods have been,
formerly kept in Pottsville Allgood and as cheap as now
mid by the subscriber, at the New Store, next door to
the " Pothrville louse," in the borough of Pottirille,
aftwesaid. Notice is hereby given that said rumors hat ,
ing no foundation in fact, the above reward. will be ins
diattdy paid to any person pr persons who shall Oteronek
fy Hamel In suppressing sueh traudar e nt moony or to
any person or persona who Alan lead the discovery of
any establishment where Cheaper or more Anhianabis
Sabi and Caps can be pnrchued than at '
BA.NrIBL.O. TAYLORsig
Nets Oily Hat, Cap and Geldkeren's jikerntshing Mom
Next door to the "Pottsville louse," in the borough of
Pottsville, atbresaid.. REMEMBER:
Snail More, alai P:74xeree, Peoftts Orstd - i;
o .
against,
large More, Gnat Expener. Plitt EISOMOUSI
LADIES' RIDING MATS (. ew Style,),
At, the City Mit* Cap Store, next dooi to the "Pottsville
Boma," Pottsville, Pa. •
April 26.1.858 - . 17-
ffEM
148270 IS
=AMU TOTAL.
20,883 OS 167,1530 19
14.193 11 112.129,11
• 42,089
tiOTTBVII,I 7 gAOA,..„
r „,.
rk,
HE Autumnal farm of tins institu
tion will begin on Monday, September ha, at 9 o'-
oc A. Si. A Frieda Teacher has boon procured for
I nstradlon in French and German. •
COTTAGE SEMINARY POE YOUNG LADIES
• Pottotourn, Montgomery County, Pa.. .
THE win t er sessions of this Institut-
MD will commence Nov:. 4th. For oircub.re with
partleolars, sicken •
saT ' Ltrin ° ire ll s T no a rg i, e liti st i tro ßY 4 Phil
sdelphla, near Norristown, Pgn, will be open tor young
tnen and boys abovel4 years of age, fttem Octoberl,lB66„
till June 1. 18dt - The site is hmitidtd, the sorrennding
praepect exceedingly beautiful, the accommodations suf.
Merit fbr 140 boarders and 200 students, and the terms
not exorbitant. The range of studies Is extensive, the
leachers experienced and able, and every reasonable eV
kwt is raids - go promote the physical, intellectual and
raorilWelfare of the scholars: A elreniar, will be sent to
'order, with particulars and references if desired.
• - SAMUEL AARON, Principal.
Norristown, Pa.. August 16..56 ,
aimbe street., volume.
BOOKS! BOOKS! BOOM
.AMMIP!M
404:032.0c0rt:
TUtt
COnttnentai
TRIMBLE & LANDIS.
Pottsville, October 4, •56
EDUCATIONAL.
Rev. B. R. 83118 En. Principal
Pottrrille. Avast 16,'66 33•
. ,
Rev. W. R. WORK,
Principal and Fropriaton.
Sept. 13,
WIRE SCREENS.
.L' !A~
ITJ - IT-11T•4"Pr:
===M
• MistentAXEo f
it
____., WATER INE:OREE. '' 'r .
rrHE Subscriber-having been &Atter
'. bed by the ewurghrtorire rif Water IlletrotHwlll
AIIE di ply orderaleth with three, et their rits. rst -*
••••,, ~ -.. •,, —. _-xi 1r it 44:
Pottsville, htillink.V s 6 ' 4• • 844"..:0. ,
14 ---
TV ; diritle QUACII7I:B.OAIiQ.
BA RI) is no w OrgalllZetolllAU
reedy to •Wend 071311.20 t rannes, JOlll3,
NM& he. Oyler* addressed N. J. P l ain, atf. O. j
CAittni, Bill reefiveraP"Wltal. ' t t , i
..,„.....,,,,„,7 1 '54:1 2 S 4I • ,
~ .JRARE.SAIS $09K8:,,..,''' _- i
N ow receiving Hemline late 're, Ce
lfe
Ea* an extensive aseortukott of ttain • e
to the Totem deparhaeata or Lithratere. vial •1 or
fermi* extremely lcrw pilaw . 1, .IL BAN -
_ _ Ceram street, oppoefte*Aphropalo
October 11,'66 ,1
~
.'
, I
id :1 y, led
10. .
pitts‘to SCHOOLINPLISTAN ,: I .
T RE . subeeriber has had Enanufaett
it
to hit *Mei a lot of Peddle dishoorlroo I
table to insert and fasten in the desks. These 1
two', sayers 'bleb-AM& 'off irked WSW, Iltsi ,4 i
they cannot be upset lad tinsreod the data
,'',
tin. , They area capital artists ihr meltris. I'
and schools supplied bathe quantity , at ' :',,:,,,
"... ..' ._ .RAM,*
• - ' .: .:'' . Cbesp wrwiesedoendlletall lkssb More.
Pottsville. May 17.16 - •,:'c - ' 1 id =tiff; -
FROP In 'PlikelFiCVl
ALR. E. T . 'I AltLOtti when i Ahe
, Ct i li a t t or mi rtaila tng ile o igta,z•nne rumored t to
oes tis th i ' 100111-
Olivine, be would notbe able trktbsplirate the vmlAilint
101110 ' and varied assortment' of its:trills' and ftehmer
Cloths, Cassimeres and Vestings that habasjuil oilivasitd
for general i3IIIeCtIDO at blamer
: dales Beam, center , of
thntre`and Mabontongo Sts. : • ' 1--: ,: -Pottsville, Muth 22.1654.1...:' RDWD. T. TATLes.
I lrAtTriirkt g h
-4Yrw r t
Li .bleb destroyed' our. Coach Factoryia n tonr wk.
vete loss, we ars not diroonieged, but bare gone TEM.
lately to work. at the old ahOpnsar the Pioneerlrernare t
where we will be happy to ewer= frkinda. -
give aka call and andat neto reed'. our lots; • -
ARRIORT DURWARD.
Pottsville. Ort.2A.W. 41trf
EXTMEMA M I T/RD,
street, ;
riIHE subscriber is,prepared, at his old
stand,. to o hunt* all kinds of material' In ids line,
lbw butldingurposee—plato and ornament& Ile in
vites partindar attention to the Tomb Stones and Mann.
manta of We ntanufaetnre. -The*'eau be hadTit'
platy of style, and will tours* throrabl.j, in beauty and
finish, with anrobtalued einwhitre; and are offered at
cheaper rates.:. - • JOHN T. LANG.
Pottsville. Slay 1T,'56 ' ;20.13'
Veciallstg,
1: and 8 manta wiaarve lLALLEN s, anniadelphla,
irtEALERS IN OIL, have just re
ifeelved, direct from New Bedford, thefollowingetrp,,
ply of 011, which they offer for sale at the lowest market
rates:.
WlnterSperni 011.3,00001 Wlnteriirhalecill, 11„'500dal.
do Itlemhantoll,9,ooo do 1 Reeked do? do 7,000 do
Also, In atore.Oreastna Oil, rale and Brawn Soap,
Sperm and AdamanCandles.
Pe11123. '56. • - B.ly
Dealers is KRAIVIIIII WOLFF.:
Lexam and 0-atty Prodiutt, •
Milton, Northumberland n
county, Pa.
lIHE subscribers are now prepared-to
fill any orders of Wheat, Rye, Corn, Oita, PotV
lm
n, Butter, Eggs, Lard, kr., that may he sent to t
Coal operators and provision dealers of Schuylkill *muff'
. would do well to get their supplies of grata and, provi
sion' from us, u we can supply them at prima to be to
their 'dratted's. Fond us your orders.
• . SRAM" a WOLFF.
!Clime, June ER, : '
GEO.V. POMEROY & CO.,
DMUS IS
OIL, SOAP, CANDLES, ail.
NO. 10 South Water street, below
Market, Philadelphia
Bpeins, lard. Elephant, Whale, Tanners' and alteldnery
011, Sperm and_ Adamantine Candles.
• Samuel I, Miller lieleemsn:
•Philawleiptda, January 5, '511„ . .
• .A. B. OORCIA13; . .
aastker, Dewier in Exchange. and Land
. , Agent,
- &illianrkr, Minnesota.
COLLECTIONS attended to and tax
es
paid throughout the Territory. Will attend Ito
the purchase and location of Government lands In Min.
newts, Wisconsin arid foam, and furniskdrafts of lands
located by him, with' accurate descriptions of the soli,
tlmber,,te. Particular attention will benison to last,
lug land warrants. itersoun dedring him to locate war
wanbishould edtherlenvnblanks Coelho assignees' names,
co attach to the warrants Powers Of 'Attorney, inthoria
lug him to locate them In their names. Certificates
from the Land Office Will be bnmedistely forwarded to
these for whom such /mations are made.
:nue 28,'b6 213-ly
A CARDI
JORN.SILVER f a kes pleasure in in:
forming his nulawroull friends and the
public generally thatihe liU left Mr. & Shin-
del's Refectory, and *en that commodious -
Belbctory hi the tent of the Odd' Fe!-
lows nail, where he will be hippy to wait on his
friends and the pnbl4. He hopes • his past reputation
53r keeping respec ble establishment for twenty-Ilse
years. in the , same line of badness; and a desire to please,
will inane a continuenee of their pationage- John / 441 '
Ter will aim presen t the public Ids sway - day's Dino!
Tare, I . _
Raw Oysters in the kbell, mit or fresh, Stewed Oysters
Spiced ditto, ditto Saltdon, Clam Soup, Boned and Roast!
ed Potatoes.. Fried Liver, ditto, fresh Fish, Spiced Lob
sters, Fresh Crabs, Boiled Ilam. Mutton Chops, Coffeeand
Toast, Spiced Tripe, Spiced fresh Fish, Sardines, Stewed
Beef and. Mutton, Catfish and Coffee, fresh Lobsters,
Spiced Clams. Bmith'S P hilad'a XX. Pale Aky Tenn gling's
and Lauer's Pottsville Pale Ale, on draught, and all kinds
of Domestic Wines tei bottl Ao., Ac. JNO. SILVEIL
Minerrrille, May 31.'55
LARGE /181ORTNIEILT OF BOOKB
as action voices.
oIIIIE -SUBSCRIBER is now receiv
tag from the late Trade Sales, an extensive variety
tandard Miscellarisona Works, which he will sell at
extremelylowprices.; Among many others will be found
The Standard Historical Library. embraring,the Works
of Rollin, Robertson, Russell, Plutarch. as., 12 vols.
The New; Library of Standard Fiction, 0/ 0 vols.
Rammond's Hunting Adventures in the Northern Wilds.
Cummlng'ir Hunter'eiLife among Lions, Eleplutnts,Ac.
Stephen's Egypt and ;the Holy. Land. "'.
Weter's Family, Eneyekledis of Usefill Knowledge.
Headley's Washington and Napoleon. ;
Newcomb's Cyclopedia of Missions. " ...
Drrychink'n Cyelopedta of American Literature, 2 ) veht.
••Ituriyan's Pilgrims Pusgress, Blustnded. .
Joeephtte Works.l - .
Face &Olt of Martyrs.
Elf/ of the Duke of Wellington, libastrated.
Chamber's Encyclopedia of Litenittire, 2 vols.
Chamber'i Intbruntien f o r the People.
Scott's Commentary cur the Bible, 2 vols.
CoMpreberrsive Crlmmentary on the Bible, S ink ' ,
Dun Quixotte and all Bias, Illustrated Editions.
Illustrated World of Art.
Tales of a Grandfather. •
~ . .
Woriurof Lorene Dow.
Button's Natural History, Plates. . •
Arabian Nights Entertainments..
Dickens'. Works, riewilhustrated Editions. • ,
Lyells' Element, of Geology. ;; ' . •
Lyells' Principles Of 1 .•
Bohm!. Novels. I 1 ~ •
llre's Dictionary of Arts Manufaetures and Mines, 2
rola. clleap. 1 ' • ; • 1 •
- • • , i i '' '. B. HANNAN, '.
Nov. 1; '5B. Centre St., opposite the Episcopal Church.
~ • . . •
The Greatest . Medical Discovery Of the
•
Age d Is
AYrArti CATHARTIC'PILLS. •
THEY doli't 14 complaints, but they
• core Won.
One box he cured Dyspersips. •
Throe boxes have cured the worst cases of Scrofula.
Two boxes have mired Erysipelas. • • Scrofula_.
re
box always !tires the Ja undies.
Three Boxes .re sure to cleans the system from Boils
• --often len than ono does ft.
'fan boxes have completely cured the worst of uloots
on the legs. j
Entail doses seldom Left teem, the
One down cures the headache arisingeficsn a foul stn.
nueh
dtrong drum, often repeated, - expel every worm horn
bAy. • I
They should be given to children, whoarealwaya more
or less afflicted with this scourge.
As a gently physic they have no equal.
tine box cures derangenumt of the Liver,
Halt a box cures a Cold. , ,
They purify the blood, and thus strike at the founda
tion of every disease.
As a dinner Pill there is not their equal in the - world.
They are purely vegetable, and can do no harm, bet do
aecomplieh en unaccorratable amount of good , • •
Prepared by Dr.J. 0, AYER, Practical Chemist, Lowell,
Mei., and sold by all druggists and dealers In medicine
throughout this section,
October 4, '6O 4112
Health slid Strength must inevitab4rlolloir its
• use.
E:
. -
NO LL
T cimittgann ROLLAND Rawl' FOR
- DYSPEPEILI, •
Disease of the Iflarierh
COMPLAINT s. •
WAAITLFESS OF -ANY RBA •
I F EV ERAND ACNE, - '
_ .
And the,earlons Oceanus conaequentupon a **ordered
BTOXACH o*, LIVEB, I '
sneti estindlgoitlen, Aridity of the Stomach, 'eallcirk
Pains, Ileartburn, Loss of Appetite, Daspoudeacy, fate
throners, bflod and Bleeding Piles. In -alt4lervorma
Rheum* sad NettratcM Affections, It has ha IlltanerMlS
Ingham, proved highly anneal/dted brothers dad.
ed a decided airs - '
.This Is a purely. affotable compound, revered do
strictly delenlifte principles, after the mannerof the ale
bested Iloitand Proassor,llearhare. Bootee/of nearest
success In most of the Suropeau States, Its Introduction
Into the Naked States traelatendrd more °spookily for
those of our fatherland mitered here and them orerthe
fees of Alas mighty country. Bating with voltam.
asp among thee. I Ass offer It to the Amnion
kneeing thane truly wonderful mOlelual Tistues taut
eitekniniedpd
1t a pirtlcakutyripeotiimindad to thaw personas; °se
eonstitutione Spey literebanlaundrod by the cantina
owe use +Warding spirthvicotiter arm of diatipatiow-r
Gimerelly instantansosis hada*, It aide it say areal)
te the eat of ilfe.thrtlifostandauleknatag every nerve,
raising rap dreopintigrivit, and la act, liaising am
health and vigor in the system: •
NOTICS.--Whoever exacta to dod la thus beverage
will be disappointed; bat lathe sick, welt and lose e.
Ited,ititill-prare a. vegetal aromatic arirlial.l ooll l
of singe la osmodisiproperties.
pat. pugratarily of tblidellghtfal
Aroma has Induced many imitationsortich tbepabile
shouldp m agldast pirrobaslng., Be not persuaded 16
bay cha- until you have .gissa • Boatsvel
Rolla t Ohm a- fale triad. Onoluttlersall convince
Ton boe; Inflate!, gawky ft is to all these Imitations.
Sold at 111.00 • per bottle, or all batik* Ito. S&W
by the NILS Psorunals c • -
BERJAIRM PACE, JR. A CO.,
1 / 9 41faci11 " , " 1 " 18 4 .3 " an 4 r
• ' • Pittsbarg,
tr iror Et* 0 , rhiladelghlar bt , tb• altekii=ifli
ZrwJYa the „Dasecrat Mat Jaws MRIO4I
INC, k Souk 123 Sortb - ld Antet--Asa. 0
10,- itlikr".lk C 144 Liustistfc, b: ' . .lobat. V.
tr
.4 OS:.; fottmaL, Ja*it .:111talni, *IA :-. MOO
0. itr. ; by ir I: tit ; 3ltanultl
th i . ..-0,, . 10 / 11 44 1 natAT Dr. rk ,
-. July 5; •Zel • • 21.
EMI
OILS! OILS SI ,OILSI 4.
;•
, , ;
HARBIN t V ; ga.
NOVE4.TY. IRON .woRKs. , •
Altk; subscribers trout d reSpeet
•
I:EAR thliihiforui the `4.41 tag of the Coal /lo'
gitie *tat lw to tihnwited to MIXIIISKftry
fn StASTOrk.IOI3OII 0; any power or lattera.
Poteps or anYeartsaity. arta Coal %usher*
or or 07 description; Blatt Yttrium Analog JAM, add
.10idSAir Machines:And Malaga trt avverrarietyatul
Som.i liming* very =least re variety of patters; aad
givatlaellltiee for &lag bailie*, thaws*. ear be axe,
ttitsel:wlth the greatest despatelt. All orders fry milcal ,
eery thaaktelly metres and !preasptsy oxistutoi. •
.•• - JONZL` •
nutisburicv , tunelis's6 I i f -- Wan
a2MIM
WORKg
Te'oll IROPUs '
• 4 antooKhere respectful/7 Invite
the earl:ll4on of the boldness colonial:ay
•
aglnctrto their sew Foundry Spdifachlnedbop,
Q/,:= ln the tows of'*LiVole, Schuylkill eonu
- ty. what* they ilte prepared to bolkl
tttnism znxint-4 Brtakent. Potty' and Machinery of
circa patters. , Also, Drill Ciro, lion Or .ntlallehatingict
any else or pattern. Being practical paechanlcs Coal
orators end others who Want twieldnery would do well cp.
to
- ore them a call and e,thulna t t work. Unless thank._
rally received and executed at he Sh ortest notice and on
reasonable tent*. ()ATLI i oigentna a CO.
CUIr. June 2.1. la 23-Iy_
- ASEIMAItD.
ASHLAND IRONWORKS.,-
• is /f TUIi SllllStiallElla are sew fully
L; q ... prepar e d to flat*itsh, at the' , Asbland Iron'
*jb ... • Work* Steani Ituntnes and IPunipe Arany
1 7 2 1:11 5.,`; power and espality. Remaining and
- . • . purposes, Coal nteakers of amyl and
of
patt
iray descriptions.ern yaw hula*, together
iz with eulthwill And is e, Coal oma Cara of
and patterns, large Wank and 11060 Cara—all i hid
lathe shortest swede,. The- eetwerthers • hatter
whew that; inasmuch as atm member of the Al is a
practical ineehanie, they will Walls ,to furnitb
uory - that will resepae, ilanwelilyr with any In t 1 lie-
Rion. All onieni-direase4 to L.; P 4 Oso ll sVitiOLial**
Mad. Schuylkill misty, Pa , will receive eroupt, sheer
Lion.; ' - , A tL. P. QA.R.I4Ea.
. 1 MICHAEL °ARNE; ,
. , . . ¶ 3OIIN C. °ARNIM,
.
Ashland, mil . ,
30 :4 6 , . - 1 #043 : IF
.; It UAW: I EII. g .
...
TANLAWVA.
CARTERS& At i _LEIMRON WIPP-KS,
seimuymcsaa vaioluaty, r-s. •
. •The Snbsoribiers,Proptieteraof the
.Itall bovenanted extaisiseestabilakanentotn
laeltuelt— ammo° the cillseni of Selnylkilloonn:
ty, and the public getterally, their rat&
• oust° turn ont atiy and all kinds of work
I d their Ihm, at the ahoiteat notlee, and in the mast sat
isfactory manner—such as building Steam Engines, man
ufactusing Railroad and Drift (Site, rnmesteasnuify and
Machinery of all kinds. i
)nly the best workmen are o t r ed, and setts:Eu.lton
may therefore be safely guar= . Drderstrom abroad
promptly; TEItB /'MLLE-W.
January 17,1853 ,' • ; 44f •
- 11E/LVEIIMEALDOWS.
B AVER"MEADOWIRON WORKS.
t. mi
MUDSON A ta twit, Iron and limas
r„„„, • FOunders, ma illy inform their pit-.
• I :"^n. trona, and the p e generally, that they
are fully p at the above establlsb
went, to manufacture Store: Regimes of
every Mae; Pumps, Railroad and Drift Can, and every,
ether demeriptbm of Iron and Brkss Castings suitablefor
the Onel mining or other bitaineakon the most reasonable
terms. Alsh.Rienring Cylinders for Past Furnace's end,
Illiehine work to general. - •
Repai of all kinds dime with neatness and deapiteit .
at the lowe st :prices. All work- furnialead by them wari,
ranted to perform well. They would solicit the custom of
thoso who may want articles in, their line in thbeicinityl
All orders will meet with immediate and prompt attetal
' 8. W. lIUDSON,
March 4,1854 W. D.. IMIRSON.
• ' DONALD4pPir.
DONALDSON IRION‘WWRKS.
LOESER, OX'. it CO. respeetful
trati ly invite the • a tention of the businese
notglll community in their ;new Foundry and
Machine Shop. lu the town of DotialiD
son, Schuylkill :edunty. They are now
ready) to execute all orders for machinery, such as
steam) engines, pumps, coal Walters, mill gearing for
grid and saw mills, railroad and drift cars, Jic.. Ac.
Being practical mechanics, are flatter ourselves that ell
work done at the Donaldson Iron IVorks, will give such
sistialisti,u, as will secure the * future custom - of
their 'patron!. Orders thankfully received and execu
ted at the shortest notice, and fin reesonable tonna,
PSTMS COX. •
ALFRED JOSE%
I , ornary 2, ISM!, ;5- ' LEWIS MILLER. I
mirrEasviLLE.
I. DEHAVEN'S.IRON WORKS, .
Minaraviile.,
THE Subscriber Is prepared to main
. • facture STEAM %Nom ES of any pewee,
=FR Pumps of any canacity,and Cual Dreakrrs
• eve,-y description/ as well as every
other kind of machinery used in Mass,
. Weakens, Furnaces, Rolling Mils. Saw Mills. Ac.'
From the facilities possessed for manufacturing, arid
from-long experience In the Denim:mai work can-hemmed
Out at this establishment, at the very lowead pricer, add
of- a Superior quality.
Persons desirous of putting uparachineryof any kind,
are invited to call and examine patterns and become ne
puainted with prices before contracting elsewhere. I
Orders of every kind are solicited, and strict attention
*ill be given to their prompt execution.
I • WILLIAM DEN AVENJ
JflponnDls.December9,lss4r 41114 f
. TILENIONT4
' I TREMONfI4I2I4. WORK.S,
Ttentont, tichayiklii motility, retina.
The Subseriberarespectfully invite
ell*the attention Of the "ti usinessconununity'
"" to their New *Machine - Shop and Foutt
* 1113/::: gum dry, erected in The town of Tremoht, and
, ,_-.. under the superintendence and manage ,
ment of Messrs. Z. Itatdorif and l'hDlu....llmimits. where
they , ,are prepared to exeeu ail order% for Miaiiiery 91
Prase and iron , such as Seam Engines of any power,
,Pctinym of any capacity. OW; Dreakeraef eriwrdeseri
Don, all kluds .of (leering foriltelUng 31111 s, Orist mid
Saw Mills, Drift Cara, and all „kinds of Railroad Outings,
auclt as Chairs for Plat snef' Rails. Fnms;Switebes, and_
all kinds of tast and Wrought 1 . ron Shaftings. Mr. Din
t,
linlti being a prattleal Meehan! . and baring bad the Om
fidence and experience for man years in the OW Region,
persons desirous , of putting It Machinery of any kind,
are invited to call and exano ur petterna and superior
quality of work; and become'. nainted with prime at
theshWorks, before contraethi elsewhere. Orders of ev
ery kind thankfully receired, i d strict attention.will be
evert to their prompt exemati , baring several 16,20,
80. 60, and 60 horse:Rngines on hand.
____!
Jan. 6, 11356 1..1y V. , ' .. & A. M. SELTZER.
PORT CA
• FOUNDRY & I KACHIPit SHQP;
!Port varbon, e layman Co., pa.
T. 11. WINT.E/tSTEENannonne.
es his readinefti from the complete main
of the above nanteifestablishraeu t, to inp
rm-:aiat ply all order* In his line of brolnem
- nick as for Skin* kbmines, Ralircwd.ind
Drift Cam, Pumps,Toal Breaketp.fastinga and Maclaine.
ry of every pattern. Ho warnuitahla work to Ova saga
f4et Inn, and accordingly soliel*T4tronageatimme and
*Drina. !Jan.:s.lM 4-ly
FRANKA,IN IR (? ~4, •WO - KS.
Tits ziarArri r 4 announce to the Pub
lie that they - a' the Proprietors of We
Li I
Tfi.s l l Franklin Workal Port Carbon, lately tar
ried on by Slllyman, where they eon
(dm
tinue to Manufacture to order at the
shortest notice, Steam Eng-lams Pope, Coal Breaker. and
Illarblnery of almost any size, MI thateriptlon,; for. mbidog
or other purposes. • Also, lialiroaa and Drift Cars, lrso or
Draw: Castings of any size or pattern Orders are restpeet
fullY. solicited. Or.o? a:SI9 S LEB, It BR?.
Franklin 84os 1 Works.
The sobseribers continue AO furnish the Colliers and
Nolte.' of Schuylkill County, .144th Shovels of all kinds,
at the lowest Philadelphia Attent Mule partlen
latlY, called to their Coal ShOtils. Orders for Shore* of
any she of pattern promptly attended to,
00.! n. pISSLRD &
Pmt Carban, August 21,1652.! 31-tf
FOUNDRY App . radHlNE SHOP,,
Steens air sle tory, ite.
IMP . NOTIC6.-4-Thebtudnees of the late but
of SYYDEnj & MILNIX., win be tonna
.. . 3 . . ~ ned by the Inibeicriber in an its wardens
:It lin;„, aux brands% of 0 t ran Engine building, lion
Founder, menutheturer of, all MO of
Machinery, for Bolling - Millrc met Furnaces, Itaitd
(bra &t., &e. Ile trill also continue the business of . in.
ini lOW Sellitg the celebrated Jhue Forest White Ash nd
Sciefir and Spohn Fein§ Red44 . h: Cbafr , being solo ProPrie•
tornf these Collieries, • , 44:0110E W. BhIYDEn,
lafinary 21,18: 4 4 ii ' e,,'3-tf
T . CO Al OPEIiAjOILE &MINER - F .
raoueer snider work..
pioßmil The subscribed respectfally inattepse
attention of the :trainees communit to
2 4 . 14 0 1 — a. their Boiler Weeks, on itallroad streetlbe•
17:101 . ...); low the Passanzer Depot, Pottsville 'a,
whore they are prepared to manse's( re
1101LEIt4 OF kitifiliY .DESCRIPTION, I
Smoke Steed, Air Stacks, Illair Pipes, Gasometers, Drift
Cars 4 dr., &c: Boilers on hand, :,. . _ I
Deb practical -- !hanks, and having for yeirstereted
oetnr, pt._ t mochano....
thennseives 'entirely to this bearish, of nosiness, they -Stot
ler theniseltes that work done st their establishment Will
Ore satisfaction to ail who 'mar firms them witlisi calk--
Individuals {lad Companies will find tt greatly to theirsid
vantage to examine their work berate ommainst elsowbiort.
, Mew 6,1853 194 f , JOlll , l a JAIIEB KOBUK
• rfsvittiucaViNitliTlVl!trib.;
tlitt lt nearer s to the -3:411)11c that their new Coll
tng DIUI is now eokapleleKl main fan ope
rt m...? o th ration, and that: tbey, are prepared to sap
ply all kinds of liar iron of ‘II.IIOtLA shies
which they will warrant to be enperlor in quality to any
obtained train abroad, at the' saMe prices.
They also otannf.rcture T tho we of the Col
ileri4 and Lateral Itosds„ weighing from .1.1 to 00 lbs. ter
yard, made of the best Iron, and, which; will be bland
mncli cheaper than the imported' article.
geing prattimi mechanics, an art:m . l'nd considerable
inpatients the - Iron bush*, hey Batter themselaes
that they ran give entire on. to ward:Mem, and
also make It, their Interest tcrpetronize home manallic,
JOlOl & CO.
December "rrL 6.1851 - i 49.tp
WASHIN E 9TON ift,Cl„N . WORKS,:
• — ,
• J. WREN a BROS. respectfully Invite
12__.‘ the attention of ,the business eummunity
r t ."' to their
New Machine Shop and You dry
tyly diaz erectedbetwoen Coal and flathead idt:tats,
and fronting on iNbrweglan street, *hem
t bey are prepared to execute sin 'Orders for machinery; of
Brass and front, such as Steam litigities.sli kinds of Gear•
ie for liolling Grist and Saw Mills , Single and
!Male Acting Coal Dmitri:a, Drift Cars, ail kinds
of itaflmnd Coatings, such as Malts for Slat and T Rs#l I
Vroga, Switches, &a.; all kindiof east and' Wrought iron
shafting: Being practical mechanics, and having made
the detaands of the Coal Reg op their study for yetaa
also all kinds of Machinery In their line of Nahum; they
flatter themselves that wor# doneat their eatabilahment
will give satisfaction to , alEirho may hmior them with a
call. All order: thankfully remised and promptly els.
anted, on the moot reazonalle fermi.
JOIN Y. THOMAS leTllElkij
'• 'NAMES
October 2. iSat I • it att
PALO ALTO ROLLING MILL.
THE Subsea-those beg leave to Idt.
nonuro to their friends and the Dahlia,
- I =R senerally,that their new Rolling Mill at
a l ia Palo Alto a n dt eoneldera, and t u ft L w
operation,hat they are prepared te
rani ii rails of various patio:firma neighing front 22/te
7014 per yard.* Also. different st4esuf Gat, square ind
roared merchants' bar iron. • I
Orllerq OW rails or her Iron are tespettfellp eel led.
and *ill meet with prompt attleatiee 'Cleft 'Ober it
the Molting Mill, Bright a Iderh), Midvale nor*
Centre street, or at their oats% 11AnTOOM, LYE a "
IFFICE--N. E. coiner. Cipore and
yi Market etreets,2d stop*. t , ottirrilli(Jantrari Ist,
18581 The naderstrord bare this des rortrQ a erect
ners,rip under the idyl° and prof of MAI WOOD, LER It
CO., air the purposerof manufaetttrin* Railroad and
Inas at their Palo Alta Rollins littli.l
DENJAMT‘ HAYWOOD, •
A 0 tiMiall RRI UT, -
Of. MARRO.
The b ad, els of itto late gnu br Lee, Bright A etlyili
be *tied bp the Graf of ii gibed, Leek Co.
Jan. 1. 141.
• TIMOTHY AWED.
Tllg : 'receivpil, a lot t pi suponor
of 'Athy Said—aaa crop. For Ws by H. DAYNAN.
SOVOLOMllilfia k
SOB sv.“4 „monk!. respec
r.
then wararrow andeaaktultraat
icaapritAtiOlnaityithatUrolly *ll4:llloakiag
'Young uentialsos I.laattr - i;*it, ina they
ttn Atop it talibUttkity, ' f a dialaarit
bitiiitifiattikest4 ararbk
,bitsit*Oribelo. l ootArtaki; f• IA"
, p/- AI. A. WITT. 4 ROI itt".
- 111. Obtain:aruxtitir ;4'Vettb. - 314140a.
April ; - 147
/ ,
U==2EmMJ
Ths4ssksiglsrlisig. ' •
Fine t in ,Stain +Wittman° .tbs 20th inst., is a
day of Ttanitsgivisg. •
Th• Washliiiirtoa, Vales. •
-
This papa to to hors tvitt oeironvoitoboof ;ilk" o '•
North awl soother Aviv tie tomb.' lyir. l :7sl44Olv-
• •.,
Owl retiring. -• ' 2% 3 ' .•
I • , Labs Disasters.
A gide on the northern lake. baa drirea.alliora
or hadly dairmiged Opine twenty tassels, and. tha
~riget Cumberland la reported lost, with all 'on
board -
• PRESIDENT= ELECTION. •
• Annexed are ; the pluralities in the yari' °as States
;of the Union ie fir as is Joann with any, degree
of 'cart:anti. In the Northern - Statessome
i.OOO rotes were polled for Mr.' Fillmore,' 'la lean . :
eimiteetten c with this rota Which' Wi l e polled
..
Fremont In the Smith, must be added to dui Oppo.:'
' :Mon vote stain:lst, Barbarian. — But 1 State re.
mains to be heard from. Buchananis elected, !rat •
it is by a minority rote: '
• Tom • : -»u, ' ,
r•
• Butleti. Opposi'n.'
New ilampatdro, 1,00 0
Vermont, , g •
Massothtuolts 10,000 • .
.
Rhode Wand, —.-- 5,000
New York,-. geogn ' as
!Pew Jersey. 15,000 7•
Peerrayitanb. • 00,000 +---- • D •
Apo.
Maryland,.B,ooo •
Virginia, • 2 0 000 .• 70 ,
s:or.h Carolina,. 15,000 -
.10 ,
South Clarollma, 00,000 . 8
tleorgia,' ••• . 15900 be • • - ,
10,000 ' 9- v— .
Mbeirelppi, 10,009 •„„„
Lonlobna. • 2,000 8 •""' *
Tennessee 4 000 l2 •
Kentocky, - -10,000 77.
Oldo, —• ' 2940 : •
Indiana. 10,10X1'• ----7 S ,
1111 n is, . • •
,Wlecondn,
lowa,_
• •
Mlnon4
Arkar.iran, •
Texas,: ••
110114,
Califonila p „
191400 Voo,ooo
Add Probable Fillmore tote, 200,000
Popular uukt'agaluat Buck. 264,500
Peansylvaftla•.-Re
7 MM. DOM
Adams, - SCI
Allegbenj, 4900 '
Beaver, 850
Bedford,
B
as, ' C7OO
) :130
Bradrard, 4700
Burks,
Mitbr
Cambria,
Carbon,
Centro,
Cheater,
Craufbrci, -
Con. Clarion. ' 1071
d.
Columbia,- Ibet
Cumberland. . dlo
Datmb . WO
Dvlairarei SZ
Erie. =4O -a
Fayette,- 45C
Frattkan, , aK
Greene, • 1256
: • • • New Jersey. '
Newell, Republican, is .elected Governor, el.
though Baehanen'a plurality it about, four then- 1
rand.
•
Is Clawson, Republican, is elected to Con-,
press from the tint distfici : George R. Robbins,
Republican, from the second; Garrett Arian,Dom.,
(rpm the third ;..John Hughes, Dam p from the
fourth, and J. R. Wortendyke, Dem., from the
fifth district. • t.
• • Row York City.
In . olo City, tho ugregato iota, etands AS
lows :'
_
Buchanan. Fre/amt. trilbnore." 4
In Twenty-two Wards, r 41.25 t - 17,04 2),C66
• New York Stitt*.
Piemont has eitriod th° State by an imenenso
plurality. TIM - following State; ticket is eleated—
Governor, John-A. King; .Lieut. Governor,. Hen
ry R., Selden ; Canal Commissioner, C. II: Sher
rill; Inspector of State Prisons, Wesley Dailey ; •
Clerk of Court of Appeils, R. F. Hicks; District
Attorney, Hamilton' Harris—all Republicans. -
In the 31st district, Situ JI. Burroughs. Ho- •
publican, has been °looted over Washington Hunt,
American. . • ,
Larisr.—lncomplete'retarna fro m' all the croon
Ms but seven, foot up is follows : o•
-203,00 G.
Fremont,
• :
. Buchanan, ; - • i r 158,006
Fillmore, • - ' 101 000' •
The Young Men's Board of Control Of New
York; bavialrendy r r ntiMinated Fitment
ton fur 1860.
Melatwarster,•-:
Buchanan's Majority lit' the State bi 1858.
The. New ICnklaud States.
Maine, New Hampshire, : Vermont, Massachu
setts, Rhode Island and ;.Connecticut, have gone
in's solid body for FrensonL . This is the-first
time since the adeption of the Federal Constita •
tion, that these sia States bay° been found array
ed on the same political side. ' "'
Massachusetts ha. given a tremendous majority
for Fremont, and the Itepublidens-have carried
the entire Congressional delegation,
the whole
State Senate, and'2B6 members of eltelowerlioase
of the,Begislature.
Peensylviumla.
The State has gone by a very largeenajority for
Buchanan.
BON.
. 'The aggregate veto of the City of Pbtladelpblw
is as follows: ' •
DeasornakC'
cillarbicuut, Yillmote. Frei out. 11111mera.
pi Wards, - 38.128 12,681. 6381 12,331
81 , 9 9 • f
. .11141011 Fillmore 12,637
Bueleo ivaj. 6,177 " Fremont 6,981
- • " - 31,949
There were also 74 straight Tremont votes to
the,2d Ward, and .27 in the 9th:. •
,ftiterairass: ' ,
••
The Republicans have carried Miehigin by a
majority of trout fifteen to twenty itheasinad,-;
electing. all thiee of the members of. Congress,
which is a gain of One. The ,Legislature will bo
largely, Republican, ensuring a Republican Setia;:'
for in the place of General Cue:
o .:The Southern States..
Nardi Carolin.Ocergia, Alaba r cpai 3fissisalppl,
and 'Arkansas, have gone Democratic by large
majorities. -
The Presidential .11/leation..l 6354 ti
DLIIOCRAY. • WHIG. P. SOIL 11:606
Franklin' 1111nttold John P. Tort.
PA= !MATO. Plate. Scott. Ilale. P. ,
California ; 40,585 35.72.3 " 100 . 4
Conneelien4,:. 33,249 50.519 ' 3.160 0 r•-:.
1111nohs. 80,577 64.747 9.731 , 11,
Indiana,; 05,299 40,1811 8,931 13
lowa.. •17,762- 15,458 1,006 4
• 41,669- 32.443 - 8
Moosachuoens, 45,875 52= 28,0= —lB
41,842 - 33,860 7.217 6 ..
Nernanipstdre, 20,971 10,146 6, 632 - 5
New Jersey', 44501 38451 =9 7
New Vet, =UM "2.0 4 8 9 25,433 33
Ohlo, . 169.160 1:2.520 31,782 25 --
PenneylYenia, 198,508 , 179,182 4.624 27
Rhode lidadd,- 6: 155- - -7,920 624 4.
Vermont, • 7 13,044 . 22.173 ken -- • a
lylseehaln, , -22,240 8,814 6 -7.
Total, 1,156,393 -1.0191.063 155,500 146.16
Pierce's pluralltyln free tllsfea, 136,310
Plane's minority ti free States, - • 39,170
-`,/ •
Alabama, , 25,881 15,631 4 2
Arkansas, 12,179 7,430 .'-4
Delaware, 4 3 1 2 • . 2 , 224 . a 2 3
• Florida, , ' '2.816
Georgia, 39,688 15.798
Bantneky, 53.896 -; 57,081 L.-, 255 1,1 .
LouWana, • 18,6 1 1 11,256 /6
Maryland, 44028 35,088 164/ 4
28,840 17,548
Missouri, 35463 39.952 —]
:lortb Carolina, 89;744' 80,058 f" 69 10
Booth Carolina, Merton (boson-by fop
Tenn s eesee,, 57,125 , 151 4 1 : : f ir
Texa, •
78,872 .89,528 .15
Total, 451,32:1. ,- seetory —. 440 WI 24.
Pierre's majority in slue Nate% '• • -.114,460
Ficreda majority in the ,
Franklin Nem, 1,67, 72;1 ••
Winfield Scott, • 1,386,934 '
-John P. Hale. - - "165.960 -
• . 4 POPtIAII TOTE Or 7111 1ta1789 RAM lISCI 1824.
Years. Dernoeratle: IThlr. Pies &42..
1624,v . 200465/ 151.8%1 -
IM . 246495 , 506,706,
R:a"~
1538, 956,019 •
18.18.. • 1,611,168
1840, ' - Y. 129,270
/
lain. ' 1088,400 -
1842, ; 1.,121,763
1843,i ' 1,061,684
1844, 1 1,831 We
- ! a 1,161,,5T4 1
:1846,; / ' 1,165,422 •
1847, /* • --- I,= - 409
My • . ,_. 1,284,884 . 4 1g0,. , ' 1.243.471
18.10,' - - - 1M8.633 .
t., ' ~ 1,317.751
1,637,728
1864
. 1
03, ;- - - . 1,861.614
1854, .. . 1,31;111
1856, i 1,454883
AItIERTiI.
- : (Wholesale IPrlees4
Wheat Moen lib!. 5.k..47 47 I LIAM Peedlelh $4 CO
nve be , do do ueporp. 2op
Whest,bushehl Dried Aloha, par'd,l
OP' -•-
Own,;, do do .1* Rutter, Per pouud„ 23
Oats, .• de • •'. 42 Shoulders, - 9 6 444
Petatrar, do Mos t de 110 it
Timothy Seed, 424 tar 4. • . • 14 -
Cleve} Sied, , • - ;SW Inaster. do '
Miller tee. , EMI, per sack,' . b%
POTTSVILLE :PRODUCE - SISREETS.
' (Umtata Irr -•
• 11.0M.—WIlat,Nkwur mats gawp tom
Atm p.io at 11yo Cbop at 8.1 91C111
atwl b 0 do: -
' it A Whits Wheat tens ot SI CS 111%*
at ;I 66 do, Sys SO do, Coro 73 do., data 46 do.
tame.-.oartpellit at 1254 ett: 1111110010 to 11110...
'oil 12 do.. &awes 1234 do., Pork 1234 da.,..16m10%., •
IQ tqll. Ito so 1214 to 16 do, 13dostutt6 40. • . •
pgoVllttolCs:—lluAlm• oats Moto to f ttoLV.
4heetol2ll do, Egrt Is. doz. „.
BCtiAfio.-Sn llotto4ill cto. 111 - eubil 16 do, , Viorir
, Moo( 14 - (16:.. - reltoie'reg"d i., 4 A" lirAlf4 14 ito m ,
amiumialselltatriAits4l4 404 • •
IDWITIAND vtutrAtauas.4 ,, riropt v i e
'Aftlis.ol,4l4kAikort4 Tatitaippler
rrantorrloo 12,4 to. it 7t . , rts , .!4,
tote frFtit 2R DO to 210 to liubatf.d, ••• • ,
: ; • S "
/1,000
/0,000. -
6,000
6,000
- ;
'.••
• 6
10,000
10,000
6,000 • •
Not beard Mut.
456,000
191,500
wurtedi"najorittei.:'
. • 11!r4nt. belt
puntlEglon, •._ 2139
ta,
Lancaster, 1400 . 140
Lawrence, 1900 ,
Lebanon, -
Lablicb. -mo
L 1120111., . 1100
I ming, , • 700
1160
IT weer a , , • 1100 .
Mittl, 286
Mane • •—•- 1800
Montgomery. 3814
,
Northampton. - ENO
Nortbutuberlarid, 14
Perry.
•-i-• ; 900
• Philadelphia, 18658-,
' etirry kill, • , 2532
aaquehaima, 1400 ;„
log., 2800
Onio, '
Warren. - 488
Wasbin4on. 100
Wettlitonthiid.• 800
York. - 2300
1300
•-•
810
19730
El=
tei,aog
JMI,M 4
76608
787.625
810.214
MI
1,066,712
972,367, •
1,274,197
.. 7,041
1.0784199 •-•-•-• • 21,606
1,626466 27,361 , •10,421
fel, 66,246 95,6,111 . ,
1.306.602 62276 • ••-•-•••-
1.143,616 • (8404 • 1,929
1117478 9.4"
1,t71,376 . 76,667
1„; 60,762 291,342 ••••••••-••
1.=3.37$ , ,649
1:116.240 •••••••••••;-• ' ' 80.7115
1;4=1 ••••••••••-•••• .174143
14W:124 166,016 '
1,192,679. 1727X881 • MAW
1,571.780 126,661 3.54,6461„
1,268,307 618,642 794,118
litOt filarKet4:
Li
Ell
. if ;.
MEE
4
169 124
111
REM
MI