The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, April 10, 1858, Image 1

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ntibed to 9tertete aid9there . -.; -.,. , ' : r ~, ,-.
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la Teushert supplied kith ilie
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,
.
a StrirgrAPSTL - - -, .7 •
dintiultlausuce of their views- ,
1
toutit lat...bun4. them uuttl .
: ' : - -I, WIL„V TgAgg lOU To Pirsitki Tali 1307 EL S. Or ISZ.V.AR22, AND DRIED OUT 'wit TIM CAVERNS OF eisENTAINg4xETAis windteni, GIVE Stur(STEI VO OUR fili,DS AND ISIOLIACT ALL NATIO= TO OUR rat ' MID PLRAIIIIIi—DT.IOIIIOOII.'
ch ' ir ii e tne t r i 4 if I p ati ew4u art : ' " ' .
-
2h.;settled iht? Mils
, aad ,
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f a
1 1 . U . S . : L . ISHER EVERY SATURDAY MORNI
. .. II y 11 . -.- .-.
oilier i ' vrtihout lotunalleig
. 1 2' 1' I AM 1 .; AN AN,- '-0 --, T. :I"I . ' - - COUNTY.L - PtNN SYL V -
L
wspapirs ere sent to the former
- -- - 1 ' .• .1 -
0 . 11
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USINESS- CAP
D. L. D -
,•
-. Matt 3
• !ants
TWO DOLL.Vit. 4 per ,
22 23 If nttkpatil Oda
uot pall FIUdo thta7dr.
Three copies to cuss address',
&wen do • do
Fifteen Ao
Ctdi. subscrllpitond mi
were, and soot so 000 ask
. 0S 111411)
The JoosHeir.-on Whir,
at $3 Vet 00 00 14 etas O T
ai .cumviha and Sax
la. Soussi advance.
rue Mir 0/
~,d i e , iiibesiorder the I
dm publisher may
~,rrillagos ar e Pam
It subscribers deglect or
lore Voiu the office to whir
held responsible until thr
• ordered them discontinue(
, . ll subseriblm more to oil,
the publisher, and the beirs t
direction, they are held responistide.
The courts have decided that refusing to tabs newsy&
iwors from the office, or removing . , and lewd - rig them en(
called, for, is priurt facia evidence of intentional trend.
• RATES OF ADVERTISING.
'One sqtisre of,lollnes, 50 cents for one insertion—sub.
solvent Insertions 25 cents each. 3 lines 'one timk, 25
sc3ats—substritteutinsortions,l2%centsoach. Alisdver
tlsements over 3 flues, for short periodh c,barg/ am a
squire.
Jalaa. 03a. ' TWO. inns. . 'ma. Siam
Three lines, 03 . 1 , 3 3 $1 . 25 $2'23, 00
Four lines, 80 5` 25 1 5 als 00,1
fivo lio, •100' 1 50 2 5 0 3 00. '6 00
Six lines, 1 2.6 225 260 400' 6 00
2 70 4 50 7 00
Seven lines, 125 2 2.5
Eight lines, 125 • .I's 285 00 , 00 I
Al as n ass , Id 223 300 550 9co
Wan coverry4 A %MARI OF Taltings.
au °van rtvg
One wintry, / 330 00 ro oo
t wo squares,2 25 400 500 900 ' 14'0(1
Th m squ sree, 330 600 750 12 00 'lB 00
rout quares, 4 50,45 00 14 00 20 00
Quarter col., 0 00. 16.40 1100 18 I 80 00
soyarser space P 4 shoitperiols, as perag went.
ine dusin evg Notiers.iteach—steconapani with an
ativellisement.so cenlaea . • .
d vertiserneut s beforOdarriages and Dim tit s, 10* cent a .
por ltnetorfrstinsertion—subuMuentlnsertinns , Scents
per ilno. Ninewordsarecountedse 41100ln advertising.
nereha tits and others, advertising by the year. with
chitages. a nd a standing advertisement not exceeding 15
lines, will be char:ed.lnqinding subscription, slooo._
8 pace to the %Inoue t orlon r squares,
T int chan
ges and sobirription,
Without shames. at the rates deli gusted above.
Advertisements set In larger tpe than usua l wilt se
prices. Ali cuts
eh:cried 10 per cent %draftee, 001 these
wit f be ,harged the sante as letter press.
No Trade Advertisements retelled from' Advertising
Agents abroad. except at 25 per cent. advance on these
prica4, toles by special agreement with' tie publisher.
3i s rfistr%2s.eents , each. Deaths accompanied win% no
iree.".:s rents, without notices, no charge. e
All notices. except those of a religiouVATiarseter and
ter edurilional purposes, will be charged I'Vrents for any
timber of lines under 10. Over 10 lines , 4 cents periltte—
additional.
Proceeilings at Meetings not of a general o fpublic char
setrr, charged at 4 cents per line for each insertion.
To facilitate caleulations wo will etatethat 326 lines
makes column-184 lines a half column—and 82 lines a
quarter eolunin. '2912 words make a COM Mn-106 a hall
dMIt-41D4 788 a quarter column. All odd noes over
each square, charged at the rite of 4 cents per line, for
one time, and 8 cents per line fer three Ames.
Yearly advertisers must confine their atirertising to
their own business. Attenelet for others. sale of Real 44-
late. Re., are not included in business adverth.ements
PAINTING, &C.
JOST RECEIVED
New Styles Papas' hangings,
OILDERS;,. FIRE • • Pa sVPI, i".•:-
.1,3 Board Print., Curtain Pa-
ice. Mores from 6. rents to Ira
V: 00, which we are prepared to ..V:. -
put up at short notice.
House mud Slgn. Painting, Glazing, *e.
Stained and -Enamelled French and American double
thick, Chryttal, hbeet and Plate Glees, furnished to or
der. All orders promptly attended In.
MUDEY.,t BOWEN,
Gluts street, 2 doors above Ameacan douse.'
%reit 24'37 1- . 12-tr
REDUCED PRIES.
• Wall Paper Cheap.
Ta IIE subscriber has a large `lot of
very choice Patterns of
N Paper, suitable for 11311 R. •`::-
Parlors, Dining, Booms, Chem-, t'A
berg and Public Buildings, willeh
be will sell at greatly reduced •—• m e
prices. Thu iiteck.embracea tlie •ts ••
latest and most esteemed Patterns. Paper as cheap as b
. cents a Mee.
Now Is thu limo for Bargains; for Paper Ilenglngeand
Bookie atß. DAMIAN'S •
•
' (Atop Wholesale mart Rdail fttper and Bonk' Store.
84"I'A PHIL lIANCIptS OUPPLIED VICItY
October 31. st. '67 41-
7 INSURANCE.
Cif/ARTIER PLIIPICTUAA& IINCORPOTIATF.D IN 1850.
THE STATE F AND MARINE INSURANCE
Company ot / Penna.
AFFI OE 7 -02 Market Street, Harris
burr, Pa. CapHiL3Bo,ooo dollorx.
Insure all tho . m.fer elinisex of propel ty,agalnFt Loss by
Fire, perils of fulmod tittitrAtion and 'transportation.
JUN P. IWTHEI4O/1.11, i'rosithot.
Ett WAtto,S..erdary. L. Mor.fox, Vice President.
BENJ. HANNAN has been appointed Agent for this
Company in tielutylkiii county, and is prepared to itl6l/103
all kinds of property at the lowest rates with regard to
sorority, .The rat a can be ascertained at his floukstoni,
Pottsville.
L. IiANNAN Is also Agent for Lll.'n as well as FIRE
Insurance. " . tDec. 49-
Lit t ni v 9Fle p OZ esis la.2 TRUST CO.;
CA . PITA/,5100,000-q.IIA TEII PERPETUAL,
ytils GompanY, chartered by. the
Legislature of l'enutlylvania, with a capital of One
end rod Thousand Dollars, is now fully °mortised, and
has commenced busindss: The Company Is prepared to
receive moneys and other property in trust, and alto*
lubwest on all money. deposited in trust, at the rate of
Ave per cent, per annum; principal and irderest payable
on demand. For rote* of Profit= on Life insurance,
see the printed Tables supplied at the °Mee of the Com
pony, Centre atroat, Pottsville. three doors soothe of,,the
Exrlisnge Hotel. JACOB 11UNTZINGERJr.,'I n ics' •L'
Watidsaron Extra, Secretary and Tretzst,irtr.
Aprill,'sS, _ • = 13 tt
- PENN.EUTVAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.,
VORTIIAST corner. of THIRD
and DOCK:streets. Philadelptila.
DAVILA'S. AtILLER. President.
• • SANCILL E. STOKIS. Via /War.
Jena W. IlonXit, Secretary. • • -
Receipts for the, year ending, Dec. 31st. 1857, V1)2.110'97
l Deers and Expenses for the 'quite period,: 71,377 90
-Oven; of the Coenparty liable to pay losses,
January 1,1858, 815,7 . 60 sa
The sul.seriber l , Agent Nettle above Company, has re
retool a F....rip Dividend of 25 per cent., and is ready now
to deliver it, and pay q Cash Dividend of 6 vr cent. on
the Actin of former yeitys-.
Perwns desirous el securing to their families a hand
some coin, for a small consideration, bill apply to
• aAltlt 1(1 ta:b, Agent.
Pattaripe, reit 13, '5B • • •
' ANTHILWITE nrsinturcs COXPANT.
' Authorized Capital, $400,000.
fiIIARTER PEIIPETUAL--Offiee,
tot Wainnt street, between [laird and , Fourth
strnets,Phiiidelpphta. ' TIAN Cinupatiy will instil e'asalust
loss.or riamue.by Fire, Buildings. Furniture. Sind Met.
rhanAllse geuet*lly. Also Stantis INSURANCE, on Vessels,
Ctr , f)t)% and Freights. [nolo Isennascr. toll 'Arts of
the Union: ' DIRECTORS:
D. Luther. • Darts Pierson,
Lewis ,ludenried, 'Joseph Maxfield,. •
Peter tiiiget, Dr. Deo. N. Eckert ) '
John K. Dlaeltistott, D. Hammett, -
&WU/ U.ltothurmet, V. Dean.
D. LUTIIER, i'resufent. •
F, Deer, flee Prerident.•
W. M. Smith, Sx•retary..
Epp. D. Lanus Lail been appointed scent for the
%hove Company in Schuylkill county, to whew perkone
desiring Insurance CJIII apply.
lattr.ary (April 'fi4 14-1 Is
INDEIIN/TY.
• ---\
r
y
HE Franklin Fire Insurance Corn-,
pany, of Philadelphia. °Mee, No, lf43%.Gbegnut
s reels, near Fifth r ftreet.
DIAECTOILS :
Charles N. Da cker, theirge W. illebarda,
I Th,mas Hart, Mordecai D. Lewis,'
Tobias 'Wt4ner, Adolphe E. Bode,
Samuel Grant. David S. Brown,
Jamb it. Smith, . Morris Patterson. - '
Continue to make I tnlranCe, pernianent or' limited. on
every description of property, in town and country, at
ratlA ac low . as are . rousistent with security. •
The Cam pany have reterved a Iwo coon agent .F and,
*hien, with their Capital and Premiums, safelyinvested,
Alford ample protretten lo tbe insured. Since their in-
corporation. a period-of Pi years. they have paid upwards
of one mill um, two lorsdr,4 - '',f,u sand dollars, losses by
Are, thereby arturding ta idetwe of the advantages of In
surance, as well GN the ability, and dispositibn to meet
with promptness, all liabilities. . . • •
CIIAS. N. ISANCKEIt, President..
CRAB. GI. BANCEEII., Secretary." .
The subscriber hM been appointed azent for the above :I
mentioned institution. and' is now prepared to make In.'
P U ranee, on every description of property , at the lowest I
rates:ANDREW IttiSSEE, Agent.
J , 1
Pottsville. an. 11.18:11 litf
THE LIVERPOOL AND LONDON FIRE AND
LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY.
.keTnoiliztt) CAPITAi.--.£.2,000,000, or $10.000,000.
Paid up Capital, gurplutcand Rase:led F
84,000,000.
•
•
•
Nearly sl7Xl,ooolnverded In this country.
Liability of the ehnreholiien, unlimited.
The Income of this Company in New York, for lgyr
was upwards of-vox - von.
The undersigned having been appointed agents of the
alw.ve Company, are prepared to receive applient Woe for
Imurance against Fire, on every description. of build•
Ins and property, !Pending coal breakerenudtbeetrue.
lure. connectul with All those parties re.
gutting insurance are respectfully Invited to call at .the
MIN, where particular. will be nivel', together Is Ith the
Company's circular, and detailed Statement of the!ron
dition of this well known and thoroughly reliable corpo.
ration;:.-
Its page the :mount of insurance desired exceed, the
nth PI of the Liverpool and London. tho:undershrited,
at
authoris e d to obtain II in other reliable companies. ' ,•
Iteforence is permitted to be road. to the following.;
gen tlenten : •
John Tacker, Esq.,' John °Moven, Esq.. 11'
James Dundne ' Geo. W. :in:oor. t:.1t:.1.. ..
John White. Esq., lion. Jame. 11. Campbell
11OliACK P. 8311 M and HENRY W. P00LE..49,ter,1
At Office of U. W. Poole, Engineer, Centie st., Pottsville
Jan.:lo, '56 ietf
LIFE INSURANCE..
riallE Girard Life ` llEUranee:
1 1 .. end Trust Company Phfladelphla t brller, ,
Chesnut street', the tint door last dr the ,Cason
tneae. .
VAMMOIF—CIIARTA'R PERPEZ7IALI ,
Zontinue to task. Inuiritnees on (lies on the most favie
stOeternis.
Theca pital lying pnid up and Invested, todether lett
' ala rga and eonsisotly intreeslng reserred fund, ,iatfer
perfect wail% to the Insured. •
The premium( may ha paid . year l y , haltyearly ,
quarter)y.
Thy ealepany add a ihNtil PdlCAily to the (neural(
eee for, Ilte, The trot hones. appniprlated In Deeena
1814; an Om second Bonus iti Deeember. ltl9. *mod
• an addition of $ 25 2 to to every 41,000 (neared wale
he althea policlec ranking whir% will be pi
When It shali hetome• n rialto. 'intend of tloodirittrl
ellyineured;thu next ohluXt,itMount tl ;z7 tit the nes
In 3ze to $1.212 141 for every the others In ib
Xl pronorthin according to the amount and time!'
atandinx, whirl) additions make a it aretaire ef more tha
60 per cent. Upon the preiniunia paid, without iae
in ; the nun tud premium.
stAxElatna
Thomna Eadznoy, ' John A. Drown;
Arum psyht, • D. banner.
Jnhn Jny &MA, '' ' Vrederkk Brown
„
Itnhort Peanut'', . • anorgo Taber, .1 ,
J....vh l'e4car, John R. Lattner,l
Tbomns P. /amen, . Wharton Lariat, '.
Josenth , lia oy. ' John It. Meek.
liumphleta containing taltlonfratasoludeXPiamit
*3 of Implication and farther I afermation can he
tits Vice. ' . THOMAS , 11 . 100 WAY, Pataideni,
ken Y. Autu. kettiary.
•
• 4 1/' Tile •su bvtl her pr agept Alf fMI AbOTO Con:pa
"Imelkill County. ana will ofhwt. 'wrung/gees, a
'''t MI 0 , ' ,. ..nry Inforutatiou Ott th e etildeet. • - '..
t " . 1'.,W2 104,
/: BAN,/ EC
XXXIV.
,SINESS CARDS.
' B
, .
ii i trorn Y laird;
. L. DODSON', Den
listket Street, three doers i ge/a •
loath side. [Pottsvillfk.lati.23.W3 44
EO. K. SMITH, Mining Engi
neer
U
and m Viewer, Pottsville, Pa. - •
eb. 14 4.! •
TopE W. GEARY, Ch;il and Mi
ning Ofc—Npfrali iPoUrg re .gu4tri
Polste
explores Is
YZEO
N....A Potts
he taw:att.;
SHEAF.FER, Pottsville, Ta.,
f the Pennsyhanta State Geological Blaney,
de, mines, •e., (October 13.'66 4 -If
GE BROWN, Dline Inspector,
ille, inspects Coal lands and Mum Partied.
paid to aeritilation. (August 1,.'51' 3l•tt
•
, RY PLEASANTS, Civil and
ng Engineer, POTTSVILLE.
stket street,borth oldle,between Centreand
(August 8,'57•
TIE • '
Second..
,
I'HARLES HERMANSADER,
Burgeon and decomeher, ,
B BUlLG—Oppoeltei the Amgen Institute.
~ , 57 ' 3.54 y
R.
t!,vi. i
August
R. SY MON S, Civil, Topo..
phical sod Alining Engineer. Centro street;
offers his services to persons requiring
'Toys and first class maps. Vex Al 4
Pottsville
accurate •
I N'S •
eneral Land Agency and
Surveyin Ocoee,
ANSAS CITY. MISSOU RI.
RA .
log
of ands..'
Elul. trot]
K, CARTER, Civil and Min
:ugineer, Surveyor, &c.., will attend to surveys
Ines, town plots. eel Office with F,'AML Lewis,
door below Silverlerrace, Potbrollie, Pa.
7
194 f
civ
it..l
IiVER CLAPP, Geological,
,1 and Mining Engineers, Conveyancers, and
to Agente--opposite the Wsbuilug
S.] SCRANTON,, Pa.
•
Pj - nee
tend% to •
I ng. Min
Eittnte,
%MC H
N HODGKISS, Engi.
and Surveyor, Centre St.: Pottsville, Pa, at.
:urveying and Exploring Coal Lauds, Inspect
:4.e. Agent for the purchase and salsa Beat
alaction of rents, - '
14' . McElwain, Civil . and Mining
oneer, Ashland, Pa., attends to Surveying and
g 31Ines. AUrVey nit and Alivldlng lands. regn
)wn Lot sotnd all other business In - the line of
sslon. Letter address,Vountaln Spring P. 0.,
ill County, Pa. Feb. 23.1857 8-ly •
.T'F. j
Ippport
hlx pro
fichuyl
H: NRY W. POOLE, • GeOloginat,
t pographirel and Mining Engineer, Centrestreet,
Pottsv le, Pa., givem attention to surveys and exatnina
;. tinne Coal Lands. to surveys of Mines requiring ape.
dab a. uragy. and to thes superintendence and entire
charite or proprietors of estates.
Fehr , ry 2, 'ST (. 1 11 1 3' 2 2, ni 4 27- fll
A . • . .
t ENCY—For ' the Purchase _and
S le of Real Estate; buying and selling Coal; ta
king arge of Coal Lands, Mines, ke.,and eollectlng
rent rom twenty years experience in the County be
hopea o give satisfaction. Ocoee Idahantattgo Street,
Pettey Ile. • CRAS. 3L IiIILL.
..Agri 11,1537 • . I . • 14dt
. . ~
..
IRONtWORKS
•..
. . •
.• UNDRY & NIAC wpm 'SHOP.
' art Car on, Sc ay !kW Co., fl.st:
er .....;,.p... T. 11. WINTtRSTEEN announe
eP hie readiness, from the complete outfit
. IHRlaggi of theabove name des tsblishment.to sup
, T vizl r a : 44 ply all orders .in hie line of businese—
'",•.r•;„ such as for Steam Engines, Railroad and
..Dril t 'are, Pumps, Coal Breakers. Castinga and Machine
.ry of • very pattern. Ile warrants his work to give satts-
BMW ' ,and accordingly solicits patronage at home and
atom . Jan. 27,1657 4- 1 .9
F
' UN Cifeir - AND - OAOHINE SHOP,
Steam Car aetorypacc.
Iwo. NOTlCE.—Theliusineasef the late Brut
dk ..mt.. of SNYDER k MILNES , will be contin
, , „. ued by the enbecrlber in all its various
...
tt,125...cc ,„. jj branches ol SteaMEngine building, Iron
Founder. manufacturer of all kinds of
Mac lnery, for Rolling Mills, Blast Furnaces, Itelltrud
Cars. ke. de. Ile will also continue the badness , of :Bin
lugd Selling the celebrated Pine Forest While Ash and
Lew and Spohn reins Red Ash Coals, bei anle ample
tor o these Collieries GEORGE w. SNYDER.
Ja nap 11.1867 ' 3-ti ,
7 ; 6TTI3VILL,E ROLLIN_O lIVIEL. ” •
'HIE bi LIRSCRIDERti are con
`,` i t ... %Dally manufacturing various sire, of
..0. ..... Colliers' Rails. weighing 22, 25.25:30,82
`,,.. and 4u pounds per yerd. Also, lerge
'". '"'"". , `.7 — " Rails of the moat approved patterns,
wni: hi ng 45.50, lel and 60 pounds per yard. From the
et. Hence of the past five years. we feel confident of
ma ng Balla uneurpaSeed In quality by any mill in the
con: try. All business remmunicatlona addressed to
Ti,, - ra. YARIMIT lE . Sea. Iron Factor,. Pottsville_ wlll
tee, .with prompt attention. JNO.BLIRNISII k CO. ,
J ~
ne 2.0, '57 • . 25.
PALO ALTO ROLLING MILL. . 7
..._ THE Subseribep; beg leave to in.,
1 •1 nonnee to their friends and the public;
' , n ' Ai:R . IW roneral iy.that theli• new Rolling Mill at
tEr . C.' - iiit Palo Alto to now corniilete. and in full
. . "
.peration, and that they are`Preparell to
fur itch T ralls of various patterns. weighing from :.',3 to
To a per yard. Also, different altos of fiat, square' and
ro . 1 merchants' bar Iron.
1, deestfor rails or bar iron are respectfully solicited,
an , will meet with prompt attention if left either at
lit. Rolling Mill, Brlght , k Lerch's; Hardware Store.
Ct. : We street, or at their office. N. E. Corner of Centre
an, Market streets, 2d story. fI.trWOOD, LEE k CO.
.lan - .. I. '57 . 1-tt
•
. • . . -• • .• " - a.
toneer er ' " -
or
The subscriber respectfully invite the
attention of the business community to
, 7: his Boiler Works,on 'Railroad- street. bo
rtilliu/04 low the Passenger Depot, Pottsville, Pa.,
where he 18 - p - remind to manufacture ~
•
(IiCILERS OF EVEItrpESCRIPTION.
15' • site Stacks, Air Starks. Illast-iyipeor Gasometerei-Drift
C rs, Ac., Bonen On hand.t,
leing a practical mechanic and has - h/for yearadersited
h self entirety to this branch 'of tbo busiumis, be fiat
t s himself that work done at bls establishment will
e malefaction to all who may.favor him with a call.—.
I • disbluabi and Comp mist wilfilind it greatly to their ad
c to, e samine his work before engaging elsewhere.
Nov. 21.7b7 47-ti) • , - JOHN T. NOBLY:.
• • - Vtilifteri9tifft WoRKC.
i • 1: & R I iron and Brass
....... Founders, 'respectfully inform theft pa- •
trona. and the public generally, that they
aro fully prepared et the above establish
. • • meta, to manufacture Steam Engines of
• ery site; Pumps, Railroad and Drift Cars, and every
o her description of Iron and •Brasa Castings imitable for
e Coal mining or other business. on tbe most reasonable
rms. Also. Blowing Cylinders for Blast Furnaces and
Octane work in general, •
Repairing of all kinds done with neatness and despatch
the lowest prices. All work furnished by thorn war-
Med to perform well. • They would solicit the custom of
ose who may want articles in their line Its thlavirin
Al orders will meet' With immediate and prompt often,
I in. • S. W..nupsox,
, March 4.15•57 o.ly W. B.:IIUDSON •
•
ASHLAND IRON WORKS.
•
• THE SUBSCRIBERS are new fully
f. • a ft prepared to furnish , at the Ashland lion
; , : k . • itorks, Steam Engines in l'unipo of any
1,,rn,.. 1 ,. zika power and capacity. for mining and other
. purposes. Coal Breakers of every she and
,attern now lit use, together with castings and forgings
if every descriptions. Coal and Drlft•Cars of all sizes
nil patterns, large Truck and Horse Cars,—tal furnished
t the shortest notice. The subscribers flatter them
:. Ives that, inaimucis as every member of the firm la a
practical mechanic, they will be able to furnish spachb
:nem, that will compare favorably with any In the Be
glop. • All orticratlirected to L. P. ARNIM k Roos., Ash
land, Schuylkill ctointy, ra. • will receive prompt atten-i
• ion. • Is. I'. GAlthr..R.
•
• 31ICIIA ELI C AltltElt;_.
JOSEPH GARNER. •
• • • • dchiand , limo 10,17 i , 10
I s . DEHA.VEN'S IRON WORKS,
iinersville: -
-- o E liubacriber is prepared to inane Cf t . facture : M
'Ali ENG lli re En of any power,
PR Pimps °fan eapacity,and Coal lireakto
, i , cuzz of every des baton: an well as eve'
. ' • .. other kind of achinery used in Mines,
Dreakere. k urnaces, Rolling Id Is. Salk Mills. Le.
From the facilities possessed manufacturimr„ and
from long experience in the bnsines „ elk can boxy r u e d
oat at t his establish ment, at the very west prieel. and
4 of &superior quality. . .
i Persons desirous of putting up maehin ery of any kind,
i are Invited to call and examine patterns and 'become rte.
puainted with prices before contracting elsewhere.
I Orders of every kind are solicited , and strict at tentiOn
wIII be given to their prompt execution. -
WILLIAM DrIfIATI:N. •
-Minersvfile, December 0, ISSI VW I
WASHINGTONigIVI . I: I VORK S.
TUOS..k JAS WIEN tegrieettaily invite
the attention of the business community
' :"''. to their New Machine Shop and Foundry
is -;;1,,,, erect
fronting on No rwegi a n s betweenl and ai
streedt lroost. whereets,
andrre
I hey are prepared to execute ail orders for machinery of
Itr ll ';'ond Iron, mach as Steam Engines alt kinds of Gear.
lag for natihic Mills, Grist and Saw 'Mills, Single and
Double:tell rnr Pumps, Coal Breakers', Drift Cars. all kinds •
of Railroad Outings, such as Chairs for Flat and T ;
Firsgs. Switches, ke.; all kinds of east and wrought Iron
Shafting- Being practical mothanire. and having made
Ihe demands of the Coal Region their study* for years,
also all kiude of Machinery in their line of business. they
' flatter themselves that work done at thetrastablishrneni
sriligive satisfaction to all Who may honor them with a
rail. All orders thankfully receirod and pro*ptiyege.
cuted, op tb e most reasonable terns". ' •
• THOMAS WREN, • JAMES WftEg. •
• Nor.= '54 i 4i.tf
•
TR EiVIO N I Q WORK , pe _S,"
Tremont, bettu T
ylk I Countymuk. •
ThoSubecri I ..rerospeetfully invite
17,0 41 11 the attention of the bnrinesseommunit
I =l4 to their New Machine chop and Foul.
.1,10/A aux erected in the town of Twernorni, and ,
_ . • under the.superintendenge and manage.'
meat of .tiesere.E. flatdoril and Philip Urnhelts. where
they are prepared to decent. ell orders for Sinebinery of
Praia; and iron, anal as Steam Engines of anypower,
Pump of any eapruity, Coal EreaheM of every dean Ip.
nee, aiLltinds of Goering for Rolling Mille, Grist and
Saw SiMa•tdid Care, and all klndao Xallread Comings,
mph an Elmira foe Flit and T Rail r mge, &kitchen, and
111 k Inds ofeast and Wrought Iron Shadings. Mr. Vtn
lioita being a practical Aleebanle,and basing had the eon
fideneiand oxperienie foe many*eare In the Coal Ilegkm,
persona dealrone of putting up Naeldnery of ang kinds
are Melted to rall and examlneettepattegue and eufterlor
quaillYdr work. and become anpaalnfed with- peke: at
thegaifor)e, belheterontinettngelamebere. ,Ordeta of .r.
eel kind t hank fully reeelrad.and strlet slttml km et 111 he
given to their iwotept execution. baring savetal 20,
10. 40, and An home Engle:exec /ninth • •
,y to .7. Irq ly X. A. AA. ann. .1
MANUFACTURES.
FORT CARBON SHOVEL FACTORY.
Gnatles anattia,.Piirletor.
All kiab ofeoal shovels, spades: obariddloa,
The patronise a( the potato Is respeethalb solid od.
latusil .10 'Si o2.tt
MATER METRES. ,
THE Subscriber having been author-
Ind bithe mauttfactitreis of 'Water liehei, will
supply all orders left with Was, at their priers.
Puttawille. Amend , 56 3 . YARDLEY UDE.
pgßaA_ -
_
ATENT M pa AUHINEMADE Paper
Dogs, to hold, from I t 6-2.0 po ..n4s. InOtorers.Drog
g s l and others, for sale by a. OARRIGUIS.
,s:overaber R.'56
lig2°..°ol„erHitt"is°,fulAmir VAT?... re
• celeo orders for all kinds oflron Ireees,Bettees,
Ira, Mulatto, Points. Ite..de..manufacturad by WOOD
a Pawn, late•Rostar WOOD, Rldget Avenue„ Pbtladel
phla, and will furnish them at their CAIII prices—ear
doge only added.. A book of specimens can De men at
our store, together with the prices of the diderent anti.
cies. . . BENJ. BANNApi.
PACING NIACIJINg.
THE subseriber.h a
as idded Paging
Machine to his Bindery and is now prepared to
lige Books, Ind number Tickets, de., in large or email
quantities. All kinds of Blank Books printed. ruled,
Paged and bound to order—mind all kinds of Bindle:
eculted at abort notice. !Particular attention paid to
Binding Idagssinea, pamphlets, Ac. 41.
June ,34.3 . Binder ,not Bookseller.
EXTENSIVE MARBLE YA - Rl2_,
fflannsateasso n t rottsrlue, ans.
THE subieriber is prepared, at his old
• stand, to furnish all kinds of materials in his 'lntl
fur purposes—plala - and ornamental. Ile Inc.
vites particular attention to the Tomb Stoneriand tdouu•
. merits of his manufacture. They can be had in every
variety of style, and will compare favorably, in beauty
and finish, with any obtained elsewhere. and are offered
a cheaper rates.. JOHN T. LANG.
June 8, '57 28-1 v
VULCANIZED RUBBER HOSE,
Fbrllydrants, Locomotives, Fire Enyirsu, and other pur
pses.
HOSE has hall; great adv antaKen
over leather, as it needs no oiling, Is perfectly
t, H w i ll S l stand a very high degree of bait without in
jury; and le not affected by the metered cold. It can be
bed of any site from 34 inch to 9 Inches Inside diame
ter—larger sizes made toorder. Also,Couplings,llrancb
Pipes, &e. For *ale by 11. BANNAN.
Potteville, May 23, '67 21-
[A. r. CUPP
16.1 y
. .
NOTICE. i . t
'To Coal Operators and tichnyllrill,Conaws
- . ty Merchants.
SMOKING TOBACCO„ by Steain
power—MOlbs a day, at Ilambnrg.ltcooklng tobac
ao and Segar Manufactory, on band and'iesdy for sale.
200 barrels sweet scented Smoking Tobacco. '
:00,000 Half Spanish Segars, •
1426.,000 Sixes, Spanish &gars. i
100,000 Seed and Extra Segarv.
Orders thankfully received and promptly attended to.
Terms easy. • MARY AN'S MOYER. * .
Tiamburg, Decks County, Pa.
Sept. 5.'57 364.1 . •
PIANOCAND NIELODCCAB ---
Of the best. Maunthettaree.W Led,
A OR SAL .BY THE . --''—
;-...- -- 7-r2.7e
subscriber. • All Plana and Melo. - - -2
g '
eons sold by him will lie irarrantad—if I. -
i-1
not witst they are represented, they can be returned.—
Ail kinds of Melodeons will be sold at Manufacturers'
cash prices In Pottsville, by which the purchasers save
the carriage and risk of transportation. Plano* wilt be
sold from $lO to $2O less than regular city prices accord•
ing to the valusof the Instrument. Those who preler it
bv,valling on us, and receiving a letter of credit, can
makethelno wn !selections sit the ManuStcturets.xseertain
the prices, and we will tkunish the instrninent selected
at the above rates. If Were is any doubt in this 'mat
ter—all we have to say ii—TltY US.
. . MAUCH CHUNK ~ 1
Wire Rope Manufactory,
Inssiner 3Eprassearci, .
'Manufacturer of Wire Rope, for Inclined planes, shafts,
allipes. lkh.,,w_auld inform the public that Le la now pre
pated tiV make . ..
ALL xl.vvs, z,r,vorns A Au) !slips OF FL..11
L.
..I.VD ROUND /COP ..,
-
At the sluirtest notice, of superior quality, and on the
most liberal terms. at his Wire Hope Vaetory,
Mauch Chunk, Carbon Co., Pa.
` 7 .: - Reference can be made to Messrs. E. A s Douglas, S. D.
OortilY,htand A. 11.11madhead. at Mauch Chunk: to N.
Patterson . , Summit 11111. to Sharpe, Lelseurinu A Co., 'r il
incrii..Luseine county, Pa.. and tn,facti nearly,all the op.
erstoriJa the Region who have been using his ropes.
Au;ust 8, 'al' ..:":2-ly
MARRS' SAPSTY LAMPS.
A limpeellor Article. •
rHE • SUBSCRIBER has just Arrv..
p Eldred from New Castle, England. a lot Of Dary'P
— Safety Working Lamps, made undorjthe inspection .
the English Oovernment Agent: of Ilist.best quell
dire gauze. Also, Gauze Covens made ready for use, or •
these Lamps. There are the best Safety Lamps ever In
troduced into this County,aud are for sale wkolesale and
retail at about the cost ut,inforlor Lamps'. Also, Wire
Gauze by the yard, and Lamystrushes by the doter or
single. Alen, the Clanuej Llifhp for Dol•ses and Mine
Viewers. This lamp is covered with a thick Claw and
gives an Increased light which Is of Importance to Mine
Viewers. BENJ. BANNAN.
a-These lanipa ran be rat Into a hex tilled with ex
plosive gee, and moved rapidly backwards and forwards I
without any covering; and will tot explode.
3.2- •
August 8,14 •
.CARRIAGE 'FACTORY REMOVED.
.undersig ttc respectfully em
brace Mix opportunitY Uniforming
the public that they have removed their
extensive Carriage Factory, from Mauch
Chunk street. where they have been "" 7 .. 010 1. 7 •J
share the late fire, to their New, Large and eommodious
building, in Sitrris' Addition; on the old site, where
they ore prepared to turn out CARRIAGES EQUAL TO
E BEST IN THE STATE and ready to accommodate
theircustomers and all those who may favor them with
their patronage. An entire new and well selected stock
of materials and the same old hands will enable them
to do work whith inelegance and durability cannot be
au • •
continue to attend to the builneuhereafter
an before, with determination to glee' general eatiefee-
RaPAllordere will receive prompt attention.
/hi - Repairing done at the shortePt notice.
July 16.!57 29-ly -11110112 g BURRLTARD
PAT NT COAL SLATER.
INTHEREAS, Letters Patent of the
United States, bearing date-the tilth day of -No.
',ember. A. D., VW, were granted to the undersigned for
"A New 'and improved Machine for Slating coal,"
NOTICE to therefore, hereby given that coal oparatorti
and others eon now purchare -.Rights" to build and use
the raid Slating Machines for counties or single collier;
les. Parties interested in this labor-saving. useful and
economical Invention, can see the "Slater" its Operation
-at Trevorton, Northumberland county, Pa. Any in
fringement, directly or Indirectly, of the said Patent,
will be pnwieutrd to the full extent of the laws of the
United States relating to Patentit and'Patenteei.
JACOB GASS.
, .
tlEOlttlE MOIVTONJ Patentees '
- -
Trevorton, Northomlberlaild county, Pa:- .
ilar-A worklpg model or the above machine may be
examined at Wm. C. smll h'v Machine Work% at Potts.
vllle. For terms, te., to Schuylkill' county, apply to
II HOBO E ,MARTZ, Pottsville.
February 20, '6B , & aid •
• PQ_TTSVIkLE • •
• Saddlaand Harness maanfictorq.
.HEREWITH invite your especial
ji attention to my, very extensive mock, of Ready Made
Saddlery, !Acmes', Cbllars. dc.. embracing the largest
variety of styles and qualities ever offered for sale In
this county, and at prices that will compere favorably ,
with those of any otherbouse In the trade.
Having been, for some years past.
In the habit of purchasing my
Baru iluterfUl est:Naively Pr ask,
I End myself now in fhb possession of advantages Iron
this taupe not enjoyed by the trade generally, end (eel
that I can, with eortfhtecce.solicit the trade ?fan classes
of dealers: and my arrangements for the coming sea
son's trails, are based upon ecru a larger 134101411 of lien.
mess than / have iptacrto data; can therefore rely
upon finding at my cstablishmeit everything that is re
quired In my line..
Orders by mail arerespeetfully solicited, and the goods
taut warranted to give satisfaction, both as to price and
t quality LEFEVEit WOMELSDO
Opposite Episcopal glsumh,Vottrestmet. s ilk .
. March 7. 1167 : .10.1
80.LONION.HOOVER.
Wholesale and Retail
TIEALER in Stoves, Ranges,i
_lf neater', Tin Ware r /foliow Ware, •
Janie Ware. Drawl Ware, French Ware, and -
eutlety, Range llama. Portable Kauges,Gas • •
Oieftsi Summer rurnace: itc., fie., bas added
to former stock of Stoves a variety, of new pat
terns of Kitchen Itanges of which he can give the
highest rear:emendation.;
Ue calla particular attention to Ids new style of Here
lerwhlch he Is confident will make the best neater that
has ever been used In this part'of the country, also, a
variety or new patterns of (bilking, Parlor, and al(
Stoves. Ue calls particular attention to his shout iron
Parlor Stove, It Irian Improvement on the Kisterbach,
- which he la confident is the best stove in use. Ile itas
now the largest stock of the above articles (too minter.
out to mention,)thattaa ever been offered in this part
of the country. lie tfi'vites his friends-and cnstometn
to call and examine for tbentsolvas. feeling confident
that be can suit n quality and prim; he Bitters
himself that he has hail much expellent% In his line of
business, therefore he feelsTeouggebis that be cannot', b e
surpassed In quality or cheapness.
44/41.00ffng and Spouting and all kind of jobbing
dose at the shortest notice:
rchCkatre sreet.
Si b doors abort Market, sees, side, ittlari//e.
.3te 'll, 1:1-
TO CARPENTERS AND BUILDERS.
SCHUYLKILL COUNTY LUMBER
•-
MANUFACTURING COMM:PANT
llAve on nand at their eaten Ire lista isliment. on
Railhead street, a great quantity of lumber of every kind
and 'description. which they can supply to Operators,
Carpenters and Builders, at lower rates than it ran be
bought elsewhere. They are also ready to Supply,
through the means of theireztensive business. and la
bor savintemach Ines, manufactured articles in their nue
at a sawing of 15 per cent., on tormer cost.
Their large workshops have been in successful opera
tion for the past year, turning on Vrast quantities of
Doors,- • Window W'rentes t
bomb, Passel Work,
ilowldlage t Bed-poste,
, Douai/tars,
Shutters, •
And all binds ef Framed. Paroled and Turned IFinde,
Which they have constantly on hand. 'They are ready
to e saute orders at the shortest notice, for arty quantity
or quality of sawed or man ullteinred at oft ' • •
Dry and kreim hemlock; of all kinds, for building par.
C4Oak, Maple. Poplar, ehair, plank and scantling .
111 Cherry Walnut. Mahogany, kr., &Mort'
work; White and Yellow Mebane!! the floorink-rair nr
• made to order; White Tine plank, a. 2 344 1. 0. 11 4.,i'
and %Inch panel, alwraye reedy t Man ,
"Wanttin.poxtssiddn ' gkg, lath, cellin: lath, Falk
• 11.2.. de.. - „ .
all 4 llltlog of mired stnlt and Otprireldak lb theirliiii
net bead or to orderod, fbnlhortn4trothly
rm!gill!it,Varrb -
MM3M;I
B. 11A:IN'AN
= za.
"-.; 10-
SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 10, 1858.
MANUFAtTriRES.
_DAR AND RAILROAD IRON.
T HE subscribers nave now on hand
sad will sell lbr OAS% at the lowest nuirkot prim
a stock of the beat quality utoututut Bar Iron, Plat
Ear Iron, sad light T rails, Ibr mines.
E. YARDLEY A ROIL
PottiniDo, November MST 48.
WILLIAMSPORT PLAIIINC MILL,
Sunbury * Erie Railroad =dee Canal,
(Oppralte the Furnsee. Wllliantsport,,enna.)
fIEO.. S. BANGER it, 'CO., Whole-
NJ! sale add Retail Dealers and Manufsetarets of white
and yellow pine hooting boards,samWdoornthilltdikohnt•
Mrs, sidl wood atooldimpt, he. At and serollsawlng,
fancy and 'Lein. All deastiptions atturninp and planing
dm* with promptness, and to the bast manner.
Februaryl2. 'la • tt•ly
SAVE YOUR TIME.
READY MADE .PAPER BAGS,
F" . GROCERS, DRUGGISTS„,
-ree.VICTIONSItS, BASERS, de.—The Bnbeerthee
respietfull Informs his friends and th e publto that be
has been s kited Arent Air the sale of
Patems Naflibur made Paper Bags,
110.1011107117 M ar
•
]Ream. /dm IL Levant Co., of n
These Bagi are of sham and qualities of paper table
for au. rayon who use the article, and are offered at
such prima as will at ones commend them to the tom
There are many edratitages • pi/chasing and using
ready made Baps. Where no bags are used. it requires
double the quantity of paper andetting to peek the same
number of pounds, and more time Itkputting up a park
age. •
When an extensive trodusai is do le and_ Bugs made
by band, by buying ready made Bays, Ons hard can be
dispensed with, By using tbeinmu will not only Yrs
time and mosey, but always hare a tonvenient freeepta•
etc in which to put up your goods. - -
Wherever theme Ban have beeqtntrodueetly they bare
given entineaatirfaelioa.
For sale at Nanufacturere prim by
BENT. BANffAN, ,
. .
Paper and Book Dealer mullStallonert
Centre Street. opposite Episcopal Church. Potts/Th*7.
A first rate assortment of WRAPPING PAPER al•
ways on hand. Feb. 21. ti-
SAVE ktONEY THESE HARD TrxEgo'
DRAINAGE AND WATER PIPE.
Ant the TAing Wanted in the Xining Region.
ri I IHE. subscriber has been appointed
Agent for the sale lof the Vitrified Stone Water
nDrainage Pipe. This pipe Images in glee from 2
aches tip to 12 inches 1n calibre, and will bear a Ores-
Sure of from 76 to 700 feet fall of water, Is &seeing laid
as iron plpe,—connections ran be made at .any Whit—
ie indestructible—will last forevet—in Net more dura
ble than Iron pipe, because it dose not rust—and Is af
forded it the following rates at our store, Pottrrille, or
can be sent aired to volute where flail Roads run from
Philadelphia when quantities are required. Freight
inned from these prices when parties receiving the
Pipes pay Freight.
2 inch pipe Ifeents per foot.
3 " " - 18 "
4 " 24, a
a_ o. 27 la
it et . . . a a
7 1 . 40 I. “
S. • ; ; 47 "
57
10 " ......4
These are the cheapest and most durable pipes that
can be obtailtied for conveying water. ,We believe they
can by laid even cheaper than wooden • pipes. and are
only about half the price of iron and lead pipes. Cali
and see them at the store of . DANIVAN.
Avid for the Nartufacrurers.
Pottsville; June, 1857. 21 -
8. O. £ 81110TH,' ,
NaNtirACTIJACKS or
Melodeon*, Organ Melodeons, and Adel Sub-
Baas Harmoriinms,
311 'Washington Street, Boiton.
r„.• ATTENTION of Clergymen,
Committees, Schools, Lodge!, Le., is invited to the
new Pedal Sub-Bass Harmoniums, made solely by the
Mnnufactoirertg.
It Is arranged with , two In - annals or banke of Heys,
the lowest set running an octave higher than the other,
and rosy be used separately, and thus get in one we
two diStinetinstruments; or, by the use of the coupler,
the two banks of keys may be played at the same time
by use of the front set only. This connected with the
Sub-flaw, will produce the effect of a large organ. and is
suMclently heavy to fill a house that seats from 1000 to
1500 persons.
THE ORGAN MELODEON
deelgnodTs for parlor and private use. 'The conStrne
tion is similar to the Chinch Instrument. being arrange
ed with' two banks of Keys, and when toed together,-by
means of the coupler, IS capable of as great volume of
power as the Church instrument, when used without
the Pedals.
_ .
Alto, every variety of MELODEONS for Parlor use.
Purchasers may rely upon Instruments from our Man
ufactory, being made In the moat erimplefe thor
ough runner. Matting removed to the epactona bnitd
togs. 611 W MOWN BMW, tee bare teary Witt
e or urincp and employ %will but
a tape need made ol w.ptltlpairti.l,l,-4.4.
shortvre II promiseoar eastorners an/nommen:
equal if Dot en nor to any Manufacturer, and guaran
tee ENTIRE ND PERFECT SATMFACTION.
- MUSIC TICACIIERS, IiVADEILS or Caonucend others inter
ested to musical matters, are respectfully invited to visit
our rooms at any time and examine or test the instru
ments on exhibition Ibr tale, at their pleasure.
AP a still further gnamnt ee to the paid le satolbeereel
ence of the MELODEONS AND lIARMONIUMS from
our 31anuftetory, we beg lease to refer,. by permission,
to the following ,
PIANO FORTE MANUFACTURERS OF BOSTON.
Who hare examined our Instruments end will glee
their opinion when called upon t
Mamma & Pons, Haunt *Conston, T. Guam, A ,Co.
P.Trossos, !Mown A Au.sit. A. W. Lon &Co,
Groins flaws, WOODWAYD Baonzt,lisrusu. A Co.
Melodeons & liarmoniums Heisted.
Persons who wish to hire Melodeons and Harmoniums
with a view of .purchasing at the end of the year. can
have the rent credited as part payment of the purchase
money. This matter is worthy Of special note, as it
enables those who desire a fair test of the instruments
before purchasing, to obtain it at the expense of the'
manufacturers. to the extent at twist of a year's rent.
Orders from any,part of the country or world, sent di
rent to the manufactory In Boation, with each or satisfac
tory reference, will be-promptly attended to, and or
faithfully executed as It the parties were porsent • or
employed artagent to select, mid on as reasonable terns
Price Lists
gsroisses,-4% octave, - - - - too
Erroll leg. 6 octave, - - - • • - - 75
Piano style, 5 octave,• . • 100
Piano style, extra fiish, 5 octave, - - 115
Piano style, carvevi. leg, - • • 125
Piano style, 2 sets Vbf ;ends, ' - 150
Piano style. 6 octave, - - - - 13.
Organ itelodeon, - • - • • - - 240
Organ Melodeon. ettra Lnlsh, 230
Pedal Sutsnass lilarmonitun, - - • - 275
Letters, Certificates and notices from the press. from
all parts of the world, may also be seen at our aaloiroom.
Descriptive Circulars sent free to any address.l
S. D. & H. smrnt.
MI Washington Street, (Near Boyle;ton ILsrket.) Boston.
June 27 '57 2041
EXTRAORDINARY
0/a °Amp It ics =E .
Both Water and Fire Proof.
XHE SUBSCRIBER has been ap
pointed Agent, and Is prepared to put on It M.
u k Co's celebrated Fire and iraterFroofKooling , ,
is composed of Fell, Composition and Oraeel—
It le mote dumb,e than either shingles, tin. Ancor Iron
',-requires no planting, and can be put on complete at
a little over oue•half the expense of other rooAng.—
The advantages ot this Roofing may be lammed up as
follows:
It Is both WATEXTICHT and FIREPROOF.
It - will not expand and contract, with heat and cold,
like metal roots.
One inch to the fool. is all the Inclination required.
The roof can be walked upon without Injury. •
It can be•used for drying purposes.
It Is of great advazdagef to firemen when adjoining
-buildings are on Sr..
It Isnot Injuriously air:acted In the least by changes
of temperature.
It is adapted to every climate. ifd r, •
It is not affected by the jarring of schinery.
It wRi bear more than doable MW eat , of zinc, Ha, or
'lol . min:ea ironorithont dangeutetheboarding beneath '
•
It is easily and quickly repaired, If injured.
Clatters of the same material tan be formed on the
Coot
ITS' COST IS MITCH MA THAN THAT DV ANY
OTHER-FIRE: •
Inaaranoe fr on litilidinge
covered with s
Hundreds 01 Banana's
Hook Store. that It is
no humbug'.
We:, the um ismse ruled
with Warren's about three
yens ago, and lonbt its of
- ey and dui teed it, and
should in buil other roob
init. • :EL CO.
Messrs. IL if. was pre
sent by invitat lon. elan experiment with your Improved
Piro and Water ProofCcmposilion Ringing, on the dist
of May lakt. The object. I suppose. was to give -persons
not acquainted with the nature of the maws. an oppor-,
(unity to me ti tested. I arched on the ground about
o'clock and saw the boards put on the roof; they were
in A rough' state, the edges not jointed. or grooSed and
matched. Afterthe boards were on they were covered
with three layers of felt, and then bye coating of Corn.
position. and the Whole coreret with gravel.
A quantity of contbmilible material wasplated within,
and at the appointei time a match was applied. A futh l
ous fire soon burst rime ,all sides; of the ilOllll4. and en-'I
weloped the whole building in a llama It continued to
burn toe at least _three quarters of an hour. At that
stage of the fire. I felt , a desire to s know bow. the roof'
would stand if water was thrown upon It, and asked per
tabsion to try the experiment, which was granted,and.l
I applied three or finer buckets of water on the nal,
which, run off as though there was no Ate under or I
'around it. _ • -
Gentlemen. my opinion Is , that so far as Are is eon.,
corned, it to the best kind of a roofarem the tart that its
air tightness prevent IP combustion case of a tire in a
building where the roof Is of your material, the fire
would not be likely to extend to the adjoining build
ings. I had an examplelifthis kind last winter, on the''
4th day of January, at g lwg in the g l ende l t. A ere'
broke out in a tow of Britt Heim*. on the south side of
Seybert St, west of 22nd street. It bads roof of your
Compoidtitni. and the Are wee enotined to thehouse
where it originated. I have no hesitation in saying that
if it had been an 'ordinary roof, the whole row would
have burned down, from tite feet thatii was one of the
coldest mornings 'life hid last Wlnter.and the wind blew
'a hurricane at the time. Seybert street Is north of the
Girard College - wall, and at that time , ofthe Morning,
together with the coldness of the weather. made it a
long time bake* we could get water on the bending- -
Notwithstanding this, we extinguished the be Unbent
injury to theiiWning buildings., •
• I therefore recommend your rooting to the nuniumity
is a supeAptprgvevithro of Are,
Very Wespectiltily Tears. de.. • •
SANUiti. P. I'EAROIf.
• _ Obitf rapiarer of Me /We &perfervid.
• Any 'nether Information with reward to Ude Roofing
eau beoblitilled by manage's theaubeerkber at bis Book
Steer, Isetrael Ikk . • IiENJ. B ANNAN. or -
JOS. Da YAWN.
Vinvittre in at Ottliard.Pottaritle,
t /rein() Miter the Moog twat sherd notkut.• ' '
Fee 430111.$ Zstabilsbutentaillinruf bomect.',Eugine
:hominy thenkera. Ae... in this Regiono;i Is Put the
met required, at Ara proof, and no ks felling ote
It VW int /I on Am
• AVlhtsigM'and tinynniartireend Meteria)
If the roWiteleliet.filo steep, • ••
•
• • •
•
. .
Vottri).
. -
NOVII ialt.El.llllll44lldiefillt.
',THE RETURN OF SPRINO.
Biding tome dancing o'ar - the Inountains,, H '
• ! Ftill sr bop*. and Joy. and diednitss, .
late Ilk the buntains, t • 1 t i t l es Nature, heart from sadness; II
Gully dose' the misty meadow; I
With Ile instal veadnin lode%
Yolknred bye We of twenty ' ,
Trips the ~ merry 'sudden,
- hes her, as 'hastens to mingle
With the tender greases there,
lolets of meet pupil' • • ,
Taken huts her parka hats..
Mee bar, as she lightly damns ,
By the brooklet In the Yale,
?hating 'Wes on Its harder&
Bidding them their sweets entail& -'
. ,
,To the wild and dlatailt woodland
Now she qtdekly hies away.
Clothing It with teal and blaimen t . ". ,
' Changing dreary night to day.
Binh; around her sweetly warble,
Blasmae taro their laughing errs, ,
lull of virgin love and homage,
On **quern or auisny skim.
Now herd& a Arrant she lingers,
And the while she potty sips, •
In return' the conecions waters
• Drink the neetir from her lips;
Gratefully they praise the giver,
Yining earth and air with song,
i.eL down the Tilley to the river
.
Bound they merrily sinus. ,
Stream's, and blnle.and bloom:Ling !lovers,
MI their greaten] homage pay, . •
Aod should man, the chief of mortals,
'-••• Pall to land her while he may!'
Can there be a heart an selfish,
One that would not gladly sing
Ver alum the "longs or childhood •
At the coming In of!prtos
•
. Blessed Spring! how pure and holy
Are the joys thou bringrst*erec
00W delightful are thy footsteps,
To my soul thy form how door; '
'Tie ttoknopn how much I lOre thee,
- Love thy Wealth Of golden hair,
_ And thy face of.angsbbesuty, . .
With the gems that sparkle them
, .
Oh! 11 thou eould'ailinger eilltb
• With thy merry smiles and Sowers, •
Earthly Ills would gtOek/y• intrlsh,
And A paradise be tun.:
Changing Summer. Autumn, Wieser,
Leen their varied pleasures bring,
But to me there's none can 'equal
Those that gild thy,path, 0, Spring!.
political Ccououtu.
TO TILE
• PRESIDENT' OF THE UNITED STATES.
Letter Pltteenth.
• For more than twenty years, Mr. President, the
Federal Government has been .engaged in an al.
must unceasing effort to securp,to itself thecontrul
of that great Insttument of association known as
money—the professed of of elf its labors in
that direction having been die establishment of
whit has been termed "a hard money currency,"
to the entire exclusion of the (paper circulation.
The more it has labored, however, toe: less boa
been the stability of the carrezioy—the periods
distinguished by its most earnest efforts basing
beta those In which we have been most compelled
to dispense with the use of the itrecious metals.—
But recently, money, as we are, told, abounded—
the channel/ of circulation having been every
where filled with gold. No* money of every
kind bas almost altogether dis4peared. "There
is scarcely," rays a recent , ,traieler, "an Eastern
bank note to be found west of Cleveland, and any
few dollars that may straggle bit way ai
re eager
•ly snapped,up and sent Bait 1 a remittance.—
Gold is hidden, where it still lingers ; but very
Much, not wily, of 'this but of silver change, has
been gathered up and sent Eatit. • Nebraska bank
notes, generally of dubious solrency, and uniform
ly convertible into specie or Eastern paper only
at a ruinous dismount, corpoilttion shiuplasters,
and even individual shinplasters—none of theta
regarded es of any value far outside of the shadow
Of the 'tall Dunks', whence they are listied-;-.4re
the accepted substitutes for money in most locali
ties upon and welt of the Mississippi. One of the
Hutchinson brothers—who; are now here, singing
their way eastward from their new bailie in Min,
neetdsokrieformed nus-lhat. be has been 'singing
!keg four hundred miles, through Mlnnetota and
3114takitig greitilorSatirsii, Wherever cash was
unattainable, and has dome very welt by it. In%
one bastacce, a termer drove up with eight bush
els of Corn in his sleigh, and his wife and six
children seated thereon, saying, 'we have no mo
ney, but we want to bear you, and corn is the best
,we can give you." He
. aecepted the corn very
gladly, goweight twent y-five cent tickets in ex
change tor it, and'sung it ont."
Similar to this, Mr. President, was t h e atate.of
things Sit the close of the first trial of "free-trade"
system, which, as you have so'clearly seen: we do
not at present require.. So was it. too, in 184641,
-at the close of the second experiment—the. only
difference between it and its predecessor having
been that the second crisis was far more fearful
than the first. So is it now, when we are fast ap
proaching the elusieef the third experiment—eactr
and'every trial of the favorite Valley of the central
Vorernment the* ending in.tbe total disappear—
!MCC olthat "metallic 4ste'whickit hu so much
desired to increase. • - ' ,
IWhy le this eo 3 Because, Mr. President,your
phdecesiors scent eve to, have reflected, to bo en
abled to rise a co inodity or thing, we most
first enable ou el get it; and that a regular
influx of the p echoes metals is quite as necessary
to the 'maintenance of the bard money circulation,
as is an influx of bides and cotton to enable us to
wear shoes and shirts. While asserting that mu
• any is a tuere commodity, they do dot admit
that it is sehject to the SWIM laws which :govern
other commodities. fled our policy , tended to
produce so great an export of cotton as to compel
our people to go In - rags, no one would have
thoughtbf charging the dealers 10 cotton with
crime; end yet while pursuing a policy that has,
whenever tried, resultedl in the disappearance of
the precious metals, the fact of inability to pro.
duce them whin demanded.' has, always been re
garded as ovideneb of 'criminality in _the hanks,
warranting new additions, e the pains and penal=
ties provided by existing laws. Year alter year,
since the central Government undertook the regu.
lation of the'currency, have they been increased;
and yet, despite the' penalties, suspensions have
occurred. They must continuo to occur, until the
central Government shell come to appreciate the
value of that very homely'proverb which teaches .
that a boy cannot - eat a cake and yet give it—
thence learning that ;a cemmuoity cannot, 'mare
than en individual, pursue a course tending
promote the expulsion of the,pracious metals, and '
yet enjoy all the advantages attendant upon the
maintenance of a specie circulation.
All commodities, lilt, President, go from those
places at Which their utility is small, to those at ,
which it is great. Therefore- it is, that cotton,
wool, sod ether-raw materials, tend toward those
places at which employments ere most diversified',
it being there that the products of the fain eons- ;
mond the largest
,quantity urinal:ley., gold and
silver folkiw in the train of raw materials; and
for the reason that where the . fanner and the arti
san are most enabled to combine, finished commo
dities ye always cheapest. When Germany ex
ported, corn and wool; they were cheap, ind:ohe
was required to retain, gold to aid in-paying for
the cloth and paper she imported--the latter be
ing very dear. Now she imports both wool and
,raga; her farmers obtain high , price for their
products, and are enriched; apd the geld conies to
her because cloth and,paper are so cheap that she
sends theman the most distant quarters of the
world. So is it With Fran* Belgium, Sweden
and, Denmark, all - of which are large importers of
raw notteriats, and- of gold: In all those coon
tries`raw materials rise in price; and the greater
the tendency - to rise, the were rapidly meet th e
current njtheprcciotte metals vet is that direction.
The country that domes to increase its.supplies
of gold and thus lower, the price et . 'peony,' is,'
.therefore, required toparsne the coarse °Fidley,
tending mortto rake, the prices 'of raw material,
and lower thoseof manufacturer.. This, however,
is directly the opposite of the policy advocatedly
the British school, which seeks, in the cheapening
of all the raw material of manufactory', the
of advancing civilization.
The proputitio.), Mr. President, above &Omitted
for ;row confider:Won, is a very simple one, sqd
yet it is by 'its aid, it . at all, that weihall arrive at
sr correct understanding of the cause of ' the diffi
culties under which we labor., The ilfetiova met.
ale gufroas 'those countries in which employments
are least diversified-;-from those in whieb agricul..
tote is least a sclenen--frood those in whietftbe
yield nf tbe hind is least-4roat' those in which
• the land' is becoming more and More .exhausted-
front these In which: the prices of the rude pro
ducts of the earth are the lowest—fres:ribose that
are becoming more and more dependent upon'
trade fromthose' in which domestic eounieree
declines—from these in which men are becoming
lees free—from all those, therefore, which decline
in eiviliaatioa ',They go to' those countries in
which rteploymentaare becoming mote diversified
to' those in which agriculture is' becoming more
end more a science—to those in which the yield'
of the land is largest-4o these in which ;be pow..
ere cf the land inerisse--to' these,iw- which the
farmer', product* command the highest prices -le
those which are becoming fees-dependent upon
foreigtiyadw—to those in which there 11 , a steady
growth of domestic etionneree—fe those In which
men are becoming less and less enslaved--to ell
thole therefore, in which, with each successive
..year. we are more and motes presented with those
pbencretens whiefs.iudicate adratice la eivWea-
Ottheineettilery lit vents mail; k is the least
.servicutils that7a last eiltainet..the ism fellow
tag thlresmel inttbe waging following
'the tertanit , the. roiliest ear; with it, lumina.
Of *MI6 lestmalenti
c'etelitie car melef.hi his
Dee *which eleicnnsthniargest apaciat, et **Pelee,
tte:prepettion to Its cos; ant therefore it is that
It is allays Ens last to-he obtaiinfd. 'Countries
whose people are limited to the siagte . pursuit of
scratehinc the eanb, can neither afford "te. boy nor
steep It.,Therefore ft Is.that the precious Instals
go from Portegel and Teensy, Brasil and Chili.l
California and As/trills, in - beth "of which latter,
the priesof money, ea inaleated by i r be . rate of in:
tercet, ii higher than in almost anyotber portion
Of. the world. Countries }hem the pursuits of
Man ire 41versitisi4— : those,i r thareftirs, to whichlle
prices of agrioultUral products tend to rrse—ene
afford to buy and , keep them: and that such di
versification is essential to the ',listener* of the
power so Co do. istpriiied by eYe'y tact is the his
tory of English commerce in Um last century, sad
in thoie of all the advancing countries of Europe
in the present one. - That power grows -with the
growth of domestic commerceohe only sure foun
dation, as you, Mr. Presidio:, have so clearly
seen. et a great -foreign on .In Its azistauce.
therefore, may be found thehost 'eoneluslti,proof
of ad periodd val s e:c m g hi c e i h ri l l i fe res iori. szis l ts Vh a, ic i b uto h n a g v oo e lst ur r eiv tbe
is,
and bow* it - has affected the supplies of golI, wo,
may now inquire. • . • •
• What was the eommeree in the .precionslnstals
in the thirty Years preceding the discovery Of Cal.
ifonfil; is shown by the following figures:
EXCeSit Emu
• • •ifrparts. ts.
-182148%, - -
6120300). /*por
1826-IK%s4,Ocia,oon
1.830-1153.1. 10,000,000
1835-101(a period of exteualre i •
i •
foreign loans). • -- Si; ''',
1833-184 Z- . 9,300,000 .
''', '
1843-1847 (foreign debt largely ,
reduced), .380040
1848486*, • ' 11400,000 ; I
In thecloeing yoar of the Free r Tmde system of
1817, Mr. President, the average „excess' of specie
export was about $2,500,000.a1,year.' Adding to
this a thriller amount, only, for: the anneal ecm
,sumptioti, we obtain an - absulitte , diminution of
five-and-twenty millions—the populatiun hiving,
meantime, increased shoot ten per cent. Under
such `circumstances, it is no matter "of surprise
that those years ate conspietious among the most
calamitous onerin all'our history.' A; Pittsburgh
flour then sold at $1,25 per barrel;. wheat.
throughout Ohio, would command but 20 Cents a
bushel ; while a ton of bar Irud require 4 a little
short or eighty barrels of four to pay for it.-=.
Such was the state of affairs that produced the I
tariff ,if 1824—s very ittperfeet measure ot, pro
tection, but one that, imperfect melt was, changed
the course of the current, and caused a net Itisport
lathe four year, that followed, of 54,000,000 of
; the precious metals. In 1828, them was enacted
,the lint tariff tending directly to the promotion
of association throughout the country, and its
effects exhibit themselvis in an excess import of
the precious metals—averaging $4,000,000 a year
—notwithstanding the discharge, in t at period,
of the whole of the national debt Om,' had been
held in Europe, amounting to many Miens.—
' Potting together Abe discharge- of debt and the
' import of colt, the balance of trade in that peri
od must have beanie our favor to the-extent, of
nearly 850.000,000, or an average of. ahqut $lO,-
000,000 a year. As a consequence, prosperity ox-
isted to au extent never before known—the power
to purchase foreign 'commodities having grown.
with suchlapidity us to render it necessary great=
ly to enlarge the tree list 1Q and then it way that
, coffee, tea and. many other raw eommodities were I
emancipate from the payment of any impost„—l
Thus did e cient protection lead to a freedom of
commerce, broad and at, home, such ss bad - never
before existed. . . • ,
Thatirst few years of the compromise tariff of
1833 profited•largely,by the prosperity eall.t.i by
the act of 1028, and the reductions under it were
then so small that its operation was but slightly
I felt. - In those years, too, there woe contracted sal
enorospus foreign debt—stopping the !export of',
specie; and producing anexcess iinportsveraging
more time $8,000,000 a ye.ir. Prosperity fettmed
to exist, but it was of the same discriPtion that
has marked the last few years, during Which the
Value of all property has depended_ entirely upon I
the power to contract debts abroad—thus placing
the nation more completely under the control of
its distant creditors. -: 1 i 1
In . the succeeding year! ?, the compromise be. !
came More fully operative.t Furnaces:and facto
ries were closed, with constantly increasing notes ; '
sity for lookitig abroad for the performance of all
eXchanges, and corresponding necessity fur remit.
Ong money to pay the balnp duo on the purcha
ses of previous year. Nevirtheless, the annual
irstele export averaged - little' more thin $2,000,-
000; dna if to this beTadded a. consiimption, of
only $3,060,000 a rear, we
,bava a reduction of ,
420,000,000, the deasequenciss of which were seen
in en almost total suspeneion or domestic eon.
snerce. The whole country was in a state of ruin.
Laborers warn everyilthere I out of employment,
had being still consumers while 'producing Matt.
mg, the power ofaCcumulation ceased, almost, to
exist. Debtnes . being averyWhero at the mercy of
creditors, sales of real eigate were chiefly accom
plished by help of the '.Bherilf, whose perquisites
were then larger . than'they had beep at anytime
front the date of the Coesitittion. I . • :
The change in the, value' of labor loonaeriecet:
upon the otoppage of the circulation that fellowell
- mitt trivial export of the pree, ions tnetahh canna
eMt. President, be placed nOces_than_s&oll
a. 'year. Wages were low; even where. employ
ment could be obtained. but a large portion of
the lahor-pUwer of the country was totally wasted,
and the demand for inimical power dimlnialsed even,
,more:rapidly than that fur physical exertion. In
the prices of land, housea. machinery ;of all kinds,
and ether similar property, the reduction counted
by thousands of milliunk of dollars, nnd - yet. the
difference between the two periods endingin 1833
and 1842 in regard to the nwinetaryi t moiement,
Wipe of $5,000,.
was only that between an excess
000, stint an eseees exp o rt $2,500, OD, or a to,
tat uf $7,500,000 a year. one twins studies
these facts, can. fail to be streck with pe wonder.
fuj power over the fiktines anti conditions of men,
exerted by the Motels provided by the Creator, for
furthering tho work of association OLtisong man
kiid. With the small exeess of import in the
firat period, there 'lee a steady tendency toward
-equality of condition among the poor and the rich,
the debtor and the creditor; whereas, with the
slight excess of export in the seeped one, there
was a daily increasing tendency towards tnequal
lty—the poor la borer and the debtor Passing steal -
fly mom undue the control of the rich empluY -r
knd the-wealthy creditor. : •;". • :
,
Or
all the machinery furnished for the wool ; f
man, there is none, Mr. president, so :equalising
in its tendency as that known by the name ortiih.
ney ; and• yet economists would hero the •woislci
beliore that the agreeable feeling ;which every.
where attends a knowledge that' it la tloviing in, is
evidence of ignorance... -any roference to - the ques
tion of the 'favorable or' unfavorable balance of
trade, beingheneath the dignity of , men who fan.
cy they are
,following in ; the footiteps of Henna
and Smith :1 It would however; be. as difficult to
find a sin gio proeporous comm unity thet Iwo I, from
year to ;earl, making lased a better mid 4e r is the
gold-produc i 6 . is§ towwfri es,' as le would be to dad
one that is not becomiog a better .eustornerto
those which produh, o silk-or cotton. Tube an bit
proving enebitoei, there emu st •be in its favor a
steadily-increasing balance of trade, to be settled
by payment,in the eammodity; for whose produo
don the contry is fitted,whethev, that be cloth
or tobacco, s Ivor Ur gold: I . ' ' I
The condi ion or the natioip at the . date of .the
passage of--the act of 1812;lwas, Mr. President,
humiliating in'the eitreme. /be - Treasury—tin.
able to obtain et home the turns required for ad
ministering thel Government,;' even on the most
economical seale—bad failed in all its efforts to
negotiate a limn at six per cent:, even in the sham
'foreign markets in which ; it had but recently - paid
off, at par, a debt bearing , an pawed of only three
per cent: Many of- the States, and sortie even of
the oldest of thane, bad biiii, nforeekto enspend the
payment of •interest •on th sir debts. The banks,
to a great extent, being i
n i . stste of suspension,
those which professed to r ; edetem their notes, bound
heir business g nay restated by the increasing
demand for coin t, go abroad' Thense oreltkergold
or . silver as carve cy had iii est altogether ceased.
The' Federal docent:mst, at recently so rich, ,
was driven to the use of eon, edible paper money J
In all its transactions vdthl the - people. 'Of the
merchants, &large iaritlcin'itad become bankrupt.
Factories and furnaces being elated, hundreds.of
thousands of piirsons were totally unemployed.—
Commerce had limey), en existence—mime who
'could not sell their own labdr being'unable to pur
chase that of others. ''.. 1 '
• •
Nevertheless, deep as sras the abyss Into which
tb ,... ll ,"l",_ had , by , Plunged , en magical was the
tweet
of ,t h e a doption of ;a eysteiti tendinx to the
creation at ,a favorable, balance of trade,.di nt
,
searcelyhad the Aci Angust, 1842. become A
ihe govertanafole found that It could
have all its wants supplied!at home. Milli. 610 7
tortes and furnaces, long closed were, again open.
ed ; labor came again int* demand, nail
barite
the close or its third yetir prosperity almort
serially reigned.:Statesiecemmenesti the Payment
of interest, oa their debts. t Railroads and canals
again paid dividends. 'Reid estate • bad doubled
ili v 'te g n
l
n ing b t
1 0 8 deri. nadn d a l : l; i rt ea l gi rs h3ePlo is jahlid b ne n -g t b • ieel S 1117 7 070(01 !O l a sw e ll ; e01 : re
$4,256400 per annum! ;. In the fast year eeee , !Tsa
the /OA famine, creating a ireol. dam" i ! or ,
fond; the ounieirence which was an impart o f
no lees than
.$22,00.00cf et e"hi—Takingaloct.l
to
tal import ip live year••, - of 539,00.0,0 00 .„
log from this but $4,000,00U Pot Aunt" r ." 7
•an • oi,nesl increase. fur t h e
sempaue, it lea v es than $5,000,000;
purposes of circniation,, of le 1
-and yet the difference in the 4;4 1 l w a bcl ou r id en 4
land in JUT, of oomr_ i i' 44 with ,„, s ,A o , oo o,oo.
i to o rry w i pe ti l a y it ie h e ie s sy l t y i l n :4:7 o :,:h d p o i :w ada i
i f e i v eo P e rn ' r a g ,[: h th r i h r:o r e i n g 7 44 '
bre a c t ini t ed h p e rtp c: p h oso l t g : tod .
Mrs of and Smith,
lu 181°41 The due:fr in fo of trade, were slain
In
In"fereace I°
the
h lora Wartlidittit litay to
idepted as thorn* by w h t , p roter nea behig
Ims ditseted to its , .
__ re
speedily
midi/teed the totAAAP AD "' ' ,
thee re.-- • within three
..,,,,,reotte,ortes
peen 14 AV (0 101 0 1 A 4 • labor *a3 seeking
41.d.rdraae" W." "I ;Lnt oativert 'more ms
ff ojor h d t 4 an : 1 t l . lt:f Ini a s i t i o t her dm tari ff of 1842. 1
Cuv. ‘ e scare7 i :tilted ,
. _
, ..
, ..
to $14000,000 and if eel, ttits be Jade.' $15,00.-
000 for consumption, It fidloire that thereduttion
was equal to the total inetesie under the preirioas
system. Circulation vac-rapidly diminishing,
and a crisis was close at band, whin fortunately
for, the advocates df the existing system, the gold
deposits of California were brought to light. Sines
that time we have exported Vitae hundreds of roil.
• lions of airline of gotd,aniterve contrasted some
hundreds of millions of foreign debt ; spathe re
sult is seen in the facts thatlmoney has ceased to
oireelete—that the primitive form of barteris In
king the place at the COWS civilised fosuaof pur
chase and sale—ting merehiints, by thouitinas ire
utterly bankrupt—that counties, towns cad 'Odes,
are unable, to pay the Janata on their debts=-that
eommeree scarcely exists--and that the Federal
Treasury is forced to the;:ise of treasury :notes
'which are lts a di ip oast, ekes eoteitareds
*taw, wig i.rigiatiaabbe ban Apogee.
Such, Mr: president, is the 'melt, as thus far
reached, at. the tiqulstitmT the currency by the
central Government. Su must it epistles. to
be, and for the reason the while e
dm government
S i
Is uneeasing ie -its efforts to compel the *people
to forego the use of bank totes, it is.eqeally an.
cussing in its aorta to reduce bhe pricer - of all
the products of the soil, - and thus compel the ex.
port of the precious Instals. Under a different
, policy, gold endeavor:flowing steadily in, would
gradnallylake the place of paper; but under the'
existing one, - if Silly carried out; we -must be re.'
tinted to baiter bank notes not Poing permitted to
circulate, and - the precious , instals riot be.
bag permitted to reiliPlo' among . Look to
whet direction we may,' Mr. President, we meet,
et !some, with evidenoys of declining civilisation;
but nowhere can. higher :proof be found than • in
the history of the crusade of ilia central-Govern
ment against - the local banks .and their °trent"-
tion. • Yours, very „respectfully. • i -. .
- ' - • - • ;11ENItl - C.'CAREY.
PAiladefelsia, .Tatteary29; ISMII. '. • . •
I
•- • ,
*Onetenth of the exeetalovei 20 per Cent. Wee" re
duced in Deeetaber,lll33; another tenth 1h 113 a ihitd
In I E 4- 4.4 Worth in 1833, the resealed niernies of duties
brink then equatlj divided lino two Parts, to be reduced
in hitt and-1842. _
Vint stor9.
ItYSTY2Y OS" TEE'xiits.
.
I - ,
,- - A few years slate, the =ell town of Bradavale, In one
' of the midisod counties of Bagland, hieeletd a new in.'
habitant te'the Perenn pia r. Crompton , who had be--
ro
h id
am possessed of a smallp roperty there, through the
• death of a distant relation; Ifs waitather an eccentric
character, hut gockt and c Rabic withal. Ms peculiar
Ztendenelei were theseof a romantic and' Oink, or vis
ionary spirit, 'showing thlves la his tiodnews for the
strange and marrellecte, An - sgenetiores 'atrial to curl
lengths that the simple f hi around COUliitleitai. Min
i i.
what they pithily called 4 r ukey."
The place where-he bad w fixed his abode did not,
either in itself trite neighborhood, present many objects
of interest to his pertieniart Mae. It leakelmost, entirely
a coal and iron diatriet, w ere practical lodiestry and
tangible results to toll we more thought of and regime
I del theta poetic association of-legeodary lore ;kook,
vale, it is true.boaated mu il lt riot all the features with
,
nut wh'elt, it - Is add, no hdi Is complete—having a
a Zama bead ilu.
Mind fi ddler, harmless ' idiot, and an old
miser;, bat - - What rat Mr Cruropton's delight, a few
- oroutbs after hie arrival, ir And there way a chance of
adding to its prrocbiat dignity by the possession of a
amour! ,' - - -' , • - - i ..
. . _-
Yoe many generation ith het oftedbeea a tnalitlon in .
, Ihookeale that-such an ex ting visitant had dtien been;
Seen at different Mites an places, but it bad aster as.:
samedauy form esore ho noble Or formidable than that;
of a large white cat, whi t was reported to have leapt;
out of rivers and-hedges, MO run -erre*. snndry fields
.:on'darlt or d uskinigtit a, When the unnatural. daub ng
whiteness of her appearance became mom Pertkularly;
i visible. . • -, . .1 - r • . 1 ' 1
, Now dlr. Crompton indite) wish to derogate from the
' dignity of the feline rii L inasaineb ati his • memory re+
Wined a vivid itaparasion of the tall credence he had
given to, and the deligh . be had asperieneed in hit
fo l .
thildhood from the per neesof the renowned "Puei
-in Boots." and the adve tune of the. enchanted cod
• • enchanting "White Cat," who altmelards becalm, a still
more enchanting fair lady; and theater% *hen be wall
first informed of the noctu rnal , visits of the Brooks-ale
eat. he felt murk lettered in her prontedinge 1
Ther e ; la aat deg of itnponauee aodimysterlous
pleasure attached to thelterhscliyakrettires.of some such
visitant*. which Induced hini to endeavor to and oat
whether any particular Moths or design was assignable'
' In tide ease. , In'ionie noble faMilles the noespecied ap
penance of i'‘`white dom" a "white • Mir". or a - .white
lady," has been the sere precursor to some misfortune
iv death in the home circle; cad .bards and novelists
have each chronicled antis events entail the charms of
gentile inkromanca lime there seemed . a Chance for
*r.Crumilloat Ills innitirird moat diligently as to the
. whereationte ited.doings, of "the White Cat MA. Brook
vale." (not a badsoundirg aside by the way, for a shoat
.stery,),workling Martell tip, to a meet excited pit-chef
. intereiri.bist nafertuorreli for ,his boMas of* termr—
etrikle g narrative. Which when well dressed up and gar-'
lashed might chili the -very marrow In the bonee—not
withstanding the Christtnaa fires he hoped to tell it by,
all three inquiries terminated untatisfactmily.• Madam
, Pules had never been known to make her appearance ter'
fore the oceutrance of any remarkable event, 'either:pitb
lie or private, and seemed to • have no .other object :in
view far her caprielOustriovements and strange vagaries
than the ignoble one of Ifrightening a few poor women
feturnlng hito from market. or trying the IMMO ' greet
ap some h a ir tipsy men , who did not give pussy i the hi•
umph of making them 41 the brut bit alarmed at her
wild jumps and boandel- This want of ... method In her,
roadneee" thoroughly disenchanted even our tottmutie I
. •riendf ha,lest all Mtenist in such a motiveless visitant. ,
- aritever even cauclescreded to make a remark water he
was tosiritrticen seen inapt& own garden gate,—
Perchance the sprite - was angered bY the indifferenee And
unbelief thus displayed. for certainly daring the last' '
. two years no accountd Wen. given of Its appearance;
and the, recollection of he once hoped tier 931hos$ -it 1
h
Broekvale" bad very .n rly faded team_ the - memory of
Mr. Crompton, when icircrunstances occurred which
• raimilit to all - its former importance In the parish, and' '
renewed our friend's interest and expectation e ;
It was &airing tows s the close of an • autumn day,
-- Which had been cloudy nig doll, the sky waspartkniar
., ly Week In the east, frog' a- strong &sulfas ray thrown
by the setting sati,'.(as if he were willing to part In good
' humor with' the world, atter a day of sulkiness ;and
',... 0)0110 rand object* o a contrary hue became roam ,:
F. quietly thrown out Id strung relief against the r--1
ark-
background. • 1
•. About half a mile from Brookvale there Is a Geld of :
.„...
some extent. nearly in the centre of which Aso &Mound;
f the nanaius of some bygotteanining operations, but now
i agar' resuming thetr , alm. and- vegetation of the flail
~rerorind, and forming a picturesque knoll, on Which the
; , fettle, grazing near,Triqueotly lie down or stand to
, catch the breeze, which circulates more freely therethan
t on the gram below. On the evening we speik td, two
young boys were pawing toward; this held, across which
a frotpith led :to mare collieries where their hither
worked, and to whom they.hed bein taking his evening
meal; - and just as theyrcromed the stile which led into
1 the field: a large black dog - came soddenly through the
. hedg e ., and began harking at them. lir. a most rage and
uncalled for manner. , Jamee Warburton, the eider of
thetwo:alttioash•bnt ten years old, had a good deal of
apt, and therstore reiwatioe the dog ' s attack , heiralor I
misty flourished the empty vin backwards and Oa - wards.
which-had , contained :hie father's troth. but unforlu;
• gaiety, with no other emelt - than that of irritating Ili.
.ateed of frightening his enemy, whO,coarard.oaa, heft th e
strangest party, an d darling. put !Jewel and his tin
- weapon of defence, Made a violent assault zit on poor lit
i. tie William, his brother, who 'was two years younger,
and a tluild, weakly child. - ; --•-.. • - _ I
willbings screams Were loud and long, but the dog
heeded theta not; be torethe poor ehild'a pinafore in a
[ Most pitiless manner. and tbendis if eatiatied with his
.paltry victory, withdrew to same little distance and
- :barked and growled angrily, running forwards occasion.
ally to frighten them, and then retreating in avoid any
, punishment of his defiant inardence . ,
• The moment his brother was released hero th 6 dog's
gripe James seised him by the artn, , arid thelconimences/
;' running homewards, but turning now and then AO Sea
' if their late enemy followed them,ltfiry canto suddenly
blimp up against the knoll we hiee described, and down
• they hotb fell on the ground from the unexpected eon
- mission: .litightenal troualtrir isle encounter with the
dog, and.confased from that/re udder' telt the poor little'
fellows wale nearly Omen Into dui by what appeared a
• terrific roar,jnet, above their heads; and rising in- haste'
and fear horn tSe grass, they gleteed. timidly up - and
• Iliere, not twenty yard* from, them: on the autumn of
themound stood a large, white of jet, so distinctly via ,
• but against the dark sky beyond that It seethed ,almost
at It cat at-marble. What its term redly_ was they
c.inld acereely tell. their eyestping lialtblin&d tnr tears,
and the due mar which bad' at I.lrst appalled ; theta
*phi ante o° their aiartled senses; 'but in a Moment
another. tibiae succeeded, • sort oficrashing sound we,
heard. a lender report—and the !creature bad disap
peared! The Terri:lea children again ikreamed and ran,
nor did they cease the exercise of their lungs or their
legs until they Pune themselves at home: , ilere,their
united hat unconnected narratirtiraised both Mir and
' Ferri*); the first part about the dog via intelligible
enough, but whst the 'equator their tale eoublyeessi
p uzz l e d their mother and all of the eight or tenj female
neighbors who collected la less thin as many usinulen,
-to hear - the strange story. 1 `
"Acd• what drat say the creetuir was 'lace au has so
frightened thee,..loarmy ?" asked! Ilya. Warburton for
, the tooth time. ' L - - -
*lt was a meat whi t, thing wills horns. and 16 lib pla
ying eyes, all 111 Stint like;" , cried Willie, ferrieralling
bls brother's reply '' - I • • ,
-N., It had , no horns, only very big ears. and ft hart
somathing
bade
- over Its eyes ," contradicted, James;
' "and It long tell, wlikh It wished about dreadful,
and like emote at of Its nose!"
"And where didst asjr it went ter; Interrogated on. of
I l
the neighbors. 1
..d . 1. ; • .
~Bo te c kuoie," Sol Willis; 'boa It inema l
to 'sink
into the grouhd." • 1 - ,
~,t
- .Wirs it anything Ikb a.willte aid in shape ,mime
too - p o oh! woman, wo all 'tenet remembered the frisks
1
and gambols of that visionary animal, In termer' days.days.. 4
and Oa lale mai ralneinbrince otitis shape and
' k .mada - tbear gutless WilUng to admit the prohi bit
11;11 its At . ise" aibland to a AVOW ;bust. se, to ,pert its
. herlok In this Ina ce, made ;qt.; Ant appearance in
that e hataetre;",and o Wilhite. many hints and helps
to War recollection f in old_Statty Adams. the I' thing"
wale finally settled b *hewn:ten to have been }lite. obt
original White teat," laver. • I . • -
with
Warburto soothed tie learn - of heechildren
with the aseurance t at Wridhing,weilid harm' them- if
they wereguod," and; adding a piece of jam mut breed`
as a substantial cntstiensation tor their late troubles,
packed them off to bid as soon as•ehe could.• ; But t h e
subject of their adve Mule was net dismissed po easily
as the children had is; She talked and thosseiti t about
it for a full hoar she aids and even when the neigh.
bore Were tired of le tiding with their arms mapped in t
4 .
the i r apromb till the evening irk grew Wily,
so
they
were.glad to ran 'hens, and poke their fires, and look
after. their ears chlidreo, Martha pondered over "the
great Whit* Ort; which reared ilki a•ball," Until site
hrew almost too oerioua to Look ronnd the house lier
usband axe to work in thermal-pit that night, so. alts
must waft some hones brake dm ' roald teal hlm the
wonderful adventure of their boys. - ; lire went quietly
Upstairs that she might not - 'wake ber children, and so
perhaps again renew Their fitinl, and In a very abort time
forgot her tr rams ill the sound sheep Induced by a day
of Industrious toil.l • . • . ,
The usual enatmons of 'a I l•
fewrinbblee thwarts lightly
against the, windoW, dlaturbtd Wog Prom , a disarm In
which she had been In actor In a iothesitaiduillar scene
to - that which bee children had described; and dunked'
rind heated ohs ram In let bet hirallecod la.** , stoat. as i
she thought, deo o'elock In the mooing, at which bow
she always rose to her irousekekt dell a` When be lay
down to rest. What then was BM Ourpriar to 11101. - that'
It was mooallght loatesitcd daylight,. and limit* hand*,
of their eldbuthF uz dnek pointed a nisseterta tervltel ,
What could , bay - ' ht Thomas home ao.osrig! " l a'
anything the in ter et the pit r she risked. 1
,;•g0,.. was the Weems &newer. ~
/ - ;;;...,rh,utt a , Weitlarted en. getteralty 'al a very
,
. .
. •
RANNAN'S
EA le! PRINTING OFFICE.
~ ~ , r-_
--- • •
• linving rowed time PrenneOni. Ifflr-PrOrkrif
pa,zseete Jon and 009 K MIM IN G or i l l infA l r at P'
1 4( 1 1 1 0. 11 r t h 0 7 8 . 0 0 1 . 1 4 0041
W OAS 44 1 4 or' 1 !* NVOM 0 0 0 1 1: 1 , IT
ineb
da4,,, /WO_ -Ws, 5 ;Witt 4 14 *
~ ;4 4 vvr duffer& ;
.1 • Hold 104 Sawa, •
' Affidavit: .dovese_ Ot t tine Binds,
dat /leads, - *edit Ands. de,
At tho very *ANA Chtistraii of JOB ri . PIC Is
twin exissilts Qui that of as, sties sites lo 114 s sp,t ,
limier the Statal. ate Ire keep - beads employed eapresely
iobbieg. Delft spreatieal Mater ourself; ire pill
suaigateocier work to Its ea nest lip that at ba
busied net td tie Attie: piavema a COLORS done
al& short* noon:; • • • •
*NIA.
' NO. 15.
cheerful, tentative disposition. and goinothase when he
an Was he would At dune teed Imre a fact a gond P
with his wife before he went upstairs for bit oecessary
east; it was thersibre an uncommon Wag fee hies teats
ft silent ors this particular night, and liartha was quits
struck by it fie beipus to undress as soon at 'be was be
Goofs. pcaparatery is the washing I. always gams Wm.
0,e4 Wiwi going to bed; but though stbutand thought- . I
fel. he seemed teethes and snowy sa well 1 I
Ea:Whin% up with Tbomael" thought his IttA;
sod her own simioutheas and ominous harecalser bath in
lttU deco. She fidgeted about, and lingul4 is the small
roam, hoping eamething would Alt from Wm to stoma
for hketraup, altered manner and yet deterred by It
from naming the adventure of Jame. and Willie; but at
'
length, seeing ides about to lie doer; la bed, with too
other communication than a hearty "Goad %debt. slip. '
Gag bhms you," female patience and curiosity would littr
bear no longer.
"Thomas, lad," she said, la * hasty Yoke, "wind ails
thee? Art like our Jem and Willie—bat seen some
thing I"
The question seemed to bomb a spell, la wither
be
husband's speech and thought had been bound, fir be
inunsdister sat united, and viaspbsg his bands ever
like eyes, Mild, in a low, trecabitug voice, "No. kfattba, I
have us men nothing, but I've beard etenetklng as 'I
bidet wr too toasty dying
"And what wait, Thomas?" asked Martha. eagerly;
'fir our toys hare teem and head samosa! woo, fist
night."
"Tall me that dm; thin:sit:o4ond he, "mayluip It'll
' one soma anemia to let thee bow what rev heard.
Slertbs, nothing loaf, began the narrative of the pre;
ceding evening, *Masao graveled. Thome grew pale'
and s ho ok with fear. At length be add; "That's very
weir where I hewed the poise r nightemed as. sod else.
meet Jonas:" mad then het went onto LAI the particulars
of theirs traight
The coal mho where they were employed had latterly
lams worked so far la one direction as to awe to some
autism, of a pit long sines Mooed. and than subterti
moth pumps being so far useful that they promoted, a
deer eircelatimi W air In the touted regions beim,
were consequently not blocked up again, altliongAnot
entered by the collets, as being malonneeted with the
scene of their twessut operations.
About an hour OW the little tWarbuttons had lawn ao
alarmed by the sight and sounds we bare thorribed,
their fatted and lotecompaulots were surprised to tour a
strange notes proceeding from owe of the old passape.—
•It was a sort ef supposed rum, or loud groan, sods - se
might bare poese from a wounded Pr angry wild
beast. but to those dark regions it arepaire4 a mend vie.
earthly and supernatural. It had not anything human
in Its tone, and yet at and they thought some one of
their companions might have strayed Into the old work.
tugs, and have been hurt by , • fell of mai, or other acct.
'dent. and they shouted at the pitch of their , : Totem to
j bear if such were the dee: but no answer was returned.
A pause eartmed, and them tame a Wag, loud, honey
groan, which frightened the poor Allows more than pit
the pulls of their daily toll—lt came through the kid,
low passages, with a t erreebrrating sound, which seemed
to WI the pi t its horrifying echoes, and then died
away Ibr a fee minutes, to be again renewed with equal
I
'lf not greater twee..
I Warburton was a braes MP above pound. sad la du
! encounter with mem flesh and toloo would not have,
flinched even under ground, but hers there reentedien
I enemy ccrumaled,apinst whom sturdy English Whigs
would not avail; In, being of a more pious donator
than too many of his ailing, be tried spiritual wespws
I against what be believed wu a spirltuat foe, and Melted
I arrival prayers against danger and temptathes. for a
short time these seemed to bath some effect, to, there
was a pause in the appalling more, but just is Thomas
and his friend weep congratulating thentsclver that "the
coda un,“ as they termed It, was driven away by their
piety. Mere came a strange, sendling. scrambling mite,
as If the, noo4ll enemy was aPPllatchtra: through the
dark pssapakrblid a longer and &ones' gnivd? than Ih"
tore immediately succeeded.
The men stood aghast tore emend or two, and thou.
by a simultaneous Impulse, threw down aqd
took to their heels, until they readied snakier port of
the pit, where some other millers wee .s-work. Fear
could not blanch their coal.bbsekened bees. hat 14 give
them such s terrified look, that their ibikfur•ern sew
It was on laughing matter which had emormit their rudders
appearance' In that division of the tole*. Als axplena
tWo followed. trod some more bard! than Ms reg. ogle
ed to explore the plumage, and end out the canes of •
alarm. They therein". returned is a bendy-lathe place
from whence Witten and Joao* had tome, and sate
enough. In min to the mune detest woke came sound
ins In their ears; who had lien most valiant, what
at a safe distance, now quailed In their turn, sod a gen.
Pal retreat took place, without any regard te pneeedarne,
and on arriving at the other workier, where the terrific
roaring+, could notresch thou,* oonsultatbrn was held
as to their future proceedings, which terminated in
Warburton and Jones-declaring that they neither could
*or .would go On with their tank that night, nor ntleti
to It noires some measures were adopted for having it tbe
"cold On" silenced or removed : and so, leaning t sir
t o fight It opt with their mysterious viol or,
If they thought it, Thorns; and named tame borne be.
ion twelve o'clock at night, to the great myrtle of their
respective wires.
When Warburton bad finished his sheep not i l, b.
and Murtha talked for some dm* overt hat. and the ad
venture of their boys. which seemed imbues Km. con
nexion with , each other. and then prudently *4. '11 4
any further costtediens on the cultfeet until ; the next
•
" key. Martha always went once a week to agile* Mr.
Crampton , one female servant in rhtanlog. and tidylog
lb* bonne, and the next day was the cos for the per.
MIMIC* of this weekly business. It followed, Uwe.
fore, SP* thing of hu s bandhat she. should narrate the
adventuatt of hor and children to ber enteral".
an d Johnson, the old 'arrant atm had vaned Mr.
ton ;
)(amid:talon as a baby, and grow n gray in the service of
the histly.teolt the privllemiutr position, and (bin.
manisded the marvellous MU lb hoc master. ,
~
. gh e army wan Jug malted to his particular taste: be
hoped It would prove something really supernst anal, and
be set forth as soon ay possible began every Information
oe the lathier:*. blear to Warburton's, hours he forma e
irraud gathering of tlin Ea%tage pit c. , lllers an their
wisest and the little Warburtatts imam told the story
cif the •Irrast white thine which hod frightened en);
1 )1.1,
Old Matt, Adams bad not qulte concerted them to Mk
Idea that It wan "the original white cat," and on bearing
their description, even hit. Crunapton's faith wavered 3
tad M all events It was fatally settled by all that this
"arced white thing," whatever It was, which bad en
dreadfully alarmed the little mime" above mound. wag.
DO aoubt, the author of the Dolma which had produced
the like terrors in the big miners under Farad. And
now, vhat • nal to be done!
"I can Alva you no adeire. no assistance at present, my
goad Meader mid lir. Crampton, moving from the exci
ted group, '‘only, pray let me know it anyth.ng further
wenn Of the same kind, and then we. ate consult to.
gethec again." Lie then walked towards bane, with •
vexed and disappointed air, and the colliers resumed
the dimunion of their plate.
"
"It ain't my turn to work In t'ptt to-night," said War.
burled..half ePoleitetioallY. "and so .1 bop, no owe via
take o ff ence At my standlnr. on 11111•14"
is a 4 bogiel mire Mitt, Dames: "Delight ha.
' man over made cnch'an awful nolare—lt's Übe a bull In
Ste, of ere Ifthe bold tan' was la pelts, and trving to tree
,
out o' pit, be makes inch a scrambling, shuffling bole*
, betimes."
We can't goon . a' this no*? said. Warburton att e r
wens reflection. , •;Wilt come lady and try to fin out.
what's like! If idea 'bogie,' we most ask parson te,fee
ridon't—And Wit is any one ea la doing It for a, i n
frighten or, leer gie him *lend pummelling r his
pains.".
The men hesitated tin a by .min!tleg, and it .nstb
reserved to comply with Warburton 'a propositioni if be
and Jones were annoyed again that day.
"So good morning, flows," cried Berne; moving
away,s•will come down at four o'clock this afternoon,
and ke ep . true wordy if you and Samuel have born frilled
'Vin "t ' •
Warburton and his companion tiers not much pleased
• &engin crafty desertion, but notesu Miens they mutt go
to Work; and so they did, pinning It for acme time
withoutlaterraption, but at the end of about ari hour,.
th e re rauTteone fond, deep groan, echoing through the
dark tavern around thou, and renewing all their former
'terrors. Again a silent patio, and then a faint heaped,
tJon of the harrowing sound. The men Ilatrned and
trembled, sodas in a few moments the daintergremn woe
re p oe t e d. Warburton exclaimed. "Samuel! 1 eke% bear
this no longer ; let's fetch foment Vother men mil Meth°
worst ; a man can but be frightened to death o nce ,
:10 come along for men and Davis, and rll be the Brat to
go up the mit. if thee dad thereat 'II follow."
Acting on this detorminatjon, they went ,to the other
workings. and collecting the men to the number of
twelve; made their desperate proposal. it took nearly
an hour to get them all In'the humor, bat at length they
fonsented, and amply provided with lamps and pickax
es, and marshalled. by Warburton, set off for the amp.
posed su'one of action.
Scarcely bad they entered the old passages when n tar
iitie roe sent fear bib all their hearts. but after halting
tunmerit W recover, they again set m i lk, and oboaith
tlie same sounds repeatedly renewed their terms, they
erepkateadily towards the spot from whence they seemed
to-procand. Part of the way was so low that ter„. had to
crawl on all.lburs, and whilst in that pantos; the same
scrambling noise occurred. which ,had twines Premed to
Indicate that the mysterious creature was, rowin g to.
wards them, and willingly would inane have retrograded.
Warburton, however, Uke a skilful general. ha 4 plow e d r• a ,
goad gom ga d true" haf, who would neither retreat him
self, noe'itelfer others-to do so. Sono Idled this, lb.
workiserevended eerudderably. the men new to their
r het, and Warburton Milian_ up hie lamp and his voice at.
the same time celled out, ..Warey preserve uNthere it lel"
cud a large, white client became distinctly vinible to tn.
whole diemaYrd party. t •
Greatieonforion ensued: theme in front retreated
those babied phrased forward; but among the latter were
some of the biggest meet. and enriewity overronstig fear, -
they pushed on in vigorously to obtain a view of the
"bogies, " that Imam of the foremost lost their toting, and
poor Thomas Warburton, with almost a scream of tenor,
tunad himself thrown forward with great k'rra into, as
it appeared, the very jaws of earns huge animal! •
The intement that be thus came in contact with bit
enemy, a revulsion talk place lo his feeling% and flb the
surprise and affright,of his companions, a iced , beret of
lanahter rungth rough the vartals passages:
...Miles up, Thomas, lad r {tied Joni,, vtla was not
f ar b e t t ing, forazobllnd op from Rhaling hie filiarll op.
“Why, Ammar said Thrum* la ai dellgibied voice.
"if it ain't aeighlxir l'rktatty'a white roves •Illowena,. am
has bern miming them three &ye P' *ad twin his
hearty laugh burst Tornio is Ulla *wad lb* relief' to his
lately overwrought feelings... .
All now pressed around the aappated ghost, gmbiln , or
demon. and ascertained to theft ardhhietlaa that War
bartoo's account was true.
The pore creature had been browsing orr the Mu of the
sw i n ti doabere was one of thole iusecumlyinsamla t t en.
emcee" IC au old onalpit (Which In litat and other al.
•ning money, ,ar• most dementia and highly to be rep.
entored,) and with the blindfolded eyes, width little
J a m es h a d ihchtly described. wan ps °biddy Inst .'ware of
the yellow* vicinity. until the unload, seemitog to slnk
under her feet, frightened leer Into living that. jirarful
roar whleh preluded her fall WO the Pllsand sq dm&
fully alarmed the pow ebildrati.
Mama roe aeon taint for oxlrlestfor the Wind an.
imst, which, oianderfol to relate. bad no; brokeat air
bones In her descent, bat bad been both bruhAtd and
sat. and angered very atneb alto front root of trod, bet
consequent
adlblewoaknoao baring readened he later limos
a.
Br. Prleolly,srod hta oral and orroaado, who had Polo
agony I mom tulle 10 Mown% illrepetkrox after 'abet
they esyyonred eras tie strayed salad , war. triply Out
to bear abet safety. and that too sot mons 'ban a quar
to° KO alk from nada men bousaaapac- Warbartoa *ma
thatikadoind she rewarded for bb rep:dela datleselna.
tiro id aro tlee-tiorloo." bad they amid • pm , r
thite„Wolo, WM[O dell to NITS
the mly yste of itsetradat‘ await up, and Daly old Mat.-- ,
ty Attains salt poorjle.Oretrotow felt any none *bar in
natural and astralloaalle a tottehadon au threw to. sorb
a proadslwaitolialieraseat of abeam duiptior la the.
leirenstarallef 'the Irbil! , Cat or Itralleal.."
i•••• •
•
•
• • - .1, • •
BOOK =DIRT.
• t bound to aniavradaty of idyls. Blank Bonita
aary'deaeriptioamumadaetarsd, bound and ruled to
.• at Aortae' *Wan
"And tam Thomas's betty," said Jones, "so I should
not like to go without him."
These who bid not been in the pit ttie - night bath. •
laughed at the iliennended fears of 'the two men, and
felt couvinee I that It was nothing huts ham, and that
they should end it out before the sent asorning; bat
when Williams and Battles, two of then. seelptica, were
relieved from their work at four ceekak neat morning by
iVarburton and his "set." they were *reed to saws
'idiot that they had, during Oa night, frequently bead
'_edge
DMA* to those described by their falk,ors, only
not to loud or so long each time.
• •"Well, lads, did's* go to gee what 'tont" deman&rd
Jones, "as some of thee thoughtlat Wax gunmen, when
Thomas and me spoke on't."
No they owned it had frightened theta too numb for
that.