The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, May 15, 1858, Image 1

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    ME&KII
antaut etlieciurrsas . „; '
T*o DOLLARS per auctulta, p%ya .11 . 10 in ad
1111 23 it'not paid within six moutture-and
uut paid wlthlu the year.
• « To CLCIII.
Three copies to one address, tio 411.3000 0
Seven do do , do $
Fifteen do d o do '. i '• o
einb subscriptions mint be invariably rat
vanes and sent to one addrast. ,• i .
. . . to ChAlUail AND ararasi
The jetwod , will 14 furnished to Claim nil
at $3 per 10 anPkni, tub on deUeery. . •
air mrsonsll-11 and Wuxi Tbeehera liepred
„w oo l', at $1 in advance. -.1
--- - - -- - .
?Mt LAW OP BIZICIPAPIIIII.
"pit arabieribers order the ditooti Unmet* of the
' opera, the publisher may tenth:me to send thei
all arroaragos are (mid.
Il subscribers neglipt or refute° to tak4 their
pert flout the office telt - bleb they are directed, I
held responsible until they hare; settled the td
ordered them discontinued.- i
If subs:lbers more, to other places' without inttning
the publisher. and the newspaper?. are 'sent to th rimer
direction, they are held responsible. I
The courts have decided t bat refusing to take
pent from the office, r remoeing..and leaving tit
called for, hsprima facia evidenceiof intentional
RATES OF ADV,ATISINC I
One square of 10 lines. 50 cents fOr one insertio
aquent I nsertiona,2s ovate each: 3 lines one
c e nts--mtbeequent insertions, 17 . " c ts , each.
vertisements over 3 lines, for . b . 4 cha 11
square..
metres. on. TWO. VIZ •
.•
Three lines, 63 88 $1
Four lines, 80 125 115 [ 2 75
Flee lines, 100 150 • 200 300
Pia flues, 125 225 260 400
Seven lines, 125 203 270 450
Eight lines. 123 225 285 •.5 00
Nine lines, 125 • 225 300 ,6 50 •
AU. oven VITZ Ltess OFFSTID AZ A EWA/Z.or ?IT
One square, . / 25225 350 tl 00 [..
Two squares. 225 400 500 900..
Three squares,
350 600 750 12. 00 er
Four squares, 450 600 00 14 00 '
Quarter cola 600 900 12 00 18 00 .1
edsfarcer space for short periods, as per 4.,
Ilusineint Notices3l each—aecompan led I
advertinement,.so cent each.
Advertisements be re Marriages and Deaths, 1
per line for first In lon—subsequent insertions,!
per line. Nine arecounted as a line in adv..:
Merchants and others, advertising by the y
changes. and a standing adventimment not ix
lines, will be chargedineluding subseriptiOn,
Space to the amount of tons squares, with chats
gee and subscription.
Without changes, at the riltes designated above.
Advertisements set in liter, type than usual
charged 50 per rent. advance, on these prices..
will be charged the suns as letter press.
No Trade advertisements received from :Adei,
Agents abroad, except et 24 per cent. advance
prices, unless by special agreement with the publi
. Marriages:2s cents each. Deaths accompanied w
tires. 25 cents, without notices, no charge. i
' All notices. except thoss of a religious charm
for educational purposes, will becharged 25 Cents
number of lines under 10. Over 10 lines, 4 cents
additional.
. Proceedings of meeting. not of a genbral or publ
meter ' charged 41 .4 cents per line 1.,r each iusersi.•
To facilitate calculations we will state that 3
make a column-164 lines a half eolumn—and 82 .
quarter column. 052 words make a column-147
column—and 733 • quarter column: All odd
each Square; charged at therate of 4 cents per II
one time. and R cents per,line for three times.
Yearly advertisers must confine-their advert
their own business. Agencies for others,sale o
Estate, .tc.,nre not included to business advert's
PAINTING, &C.
NEW STYLES WINDOW SHAD
rreeeive,d a large awl deg.. '
Pp Nortmtint Of Window Shades. new and Want
oduns, ineluding Gold Bordered. Oiled, Landscape f
ral.,Gothic Ac., Ac., cheaper than over.
• ALSO
Figured. Glazed and Plain Paper Shades, et eve
aeription ..For Sale by • BENJ. BANN '
Centre Street, opposite EpLecopaiCh
Pottsville, April 1 . 0,'5S , 15,
•
REDUCED PRICES.
Fall Vapor criaoivs.:
rx,HE subsdriher has a large 4
very choke Patterns of
I a I Paper, aulthble for Halls,
Parlors, Dining Rooms, Cham
bers and Public Buildings, which
be *ill sell at greatly reduced.
prices. The ttocit embrace, the
latest and most eiteenzed Patterns. Paper as cl
cents a Piece,
Now Is the I Imo for Bargalna, for Paper llanil
Booka at • D. YUNNAN,
_ (leap 117intekilt and Retail Piper and Bank.
AaYI'APEE lINNUEILS SUPPLIED VERY CI
October 31.at;'47 : 41-
,
. MUDEY & BOWEN,
llonot - dp . Sign Painter's It Paperkt
i. , era, . • .
'
ATE received •Nen; Stylee,
- and Decorit I ve.'' ,W A.ll Ammo*
PAPERS. GOLD WIN DOW
511 A DF.S, BORDERS, iii.,. .-.
.' Tense wishing a handanale
Parlor Paper should see our
• Imp d Gold Papers.
They aro wen ar.sioNe, agd have a better effeel
thane generally manufactured. .
Pure White Load. trench I 'Colo red, Enemt
and American Mei(' french and Ameril
Oils. Varnishes, &d. Window 0 ifli . li4, 4
(lair. Street, rollarilit, *Z. dour: ulpore Americ a n Z
; April 10. '54 144 f
INSUR
CU/OSM PER PFTVAA& IPQ ARVIRATED.I.
THE STATE F IBS AND NADINE IN. A
Company of Penna. ' '''
cAFFIL 1 .;-92 Mark' Street, lla
burg. ea. Capttal 3800: j - daii.p r a. I .
liffUre all the safer climes of p 7 petty against
Fits, pdrlli of Inland Navigation-and Transportatt
JOHN P. RUTHERFORD. Pruithusi.l
S. WARD, Secreary. L. 3.thieult, Vice ' ..•
- , 1
BENJ. BANNAN has been appointed Agent to
Company in Schuylkill county, and Is prepared' toi
all kinds of property at the lowest cures with Aiwa
security. The rates an be ascertained at Me • •
Potter Die.
BANNAN to also Agent for LIVE as well as
insure 11 re. •
It/NERS' LIFE INSURANCE AA') TRCAR
'Pottsville, Penna.
CAPITALSI 00.0 o-UHAIITEII PER PErc
f f lpHIS Company, chart?red by
LegislatureLegislatu of Pennsylvania, with a capital of
I an ired Thousand Dollars, is now fatty organised,
has emnmenctal business. The Company 1s prepan
receive moneys and other property in trust, and
interest on all moneys deposited in trust, at•tha ra
Ore per cent. per annum; principal and interest pa
on demand. For rates of Premium on Life Irian
see the printed Tables supplied at the °Mee of the
pally, Centre street, Pottsville. three doors south o
Exchange Hotel. JACOB HUNTZINOpt,jr.;
WILLLINOTON KLINE, Secretary and Treasurer.'
. April 1, '5B : • ii.tr
ANTHRACITE INSURANCE COMPANY
Authorized Capital, $400,000.
PERPETUAL= - 1 -p'
C No. 91 Walnut street, between Third and Pd
streets, Philadelphia. This Company will insuie
less or damage by Fire, Buildings, Furniturs, and
eh:lodize generally. Also 31ARINLINSURANCI, 611 Teo
Cargoes and Freights. Ist &ND Istsuaaucz to all' par
the Union. . man-roses:
D. Luther, : DaYIN Plenum,
Lewle A udenried, Joseph 'Maxfield: '
Peter 811;rer, Pr. Geo. N. raked,
John K. Illackinton, .R. Hammett, 1
Samuel It. Rothermel, W. V. Dean.
D. LUTII&R, ,
WY. V, DEAN, Vice President. - - • . . .
W .11. Smith. Snerelagy. . '
1 - 0-P. D. Locum hen been appoinfN agent for
%bore Compnny In Schuylkill county,Whom pe
deeirlog Itieurance can apply.
Jawzary 1. '57 • . [April 6, '54 14-J, I_.
.
INDEMNITY. • •
rH E Franklin Fire Insurance Co
Cpany, of Philadelphia.' Office, No , e ~ 183 1 4 dim
4 t
it reeti, flair F ft.ti at rest. .. ,
DIAICTOILIS :
Charlee N . Rancher, George W. Richards •
Thomas II t o ' Mordecai D.'Lewls, ,
s.
Tobias W.iner, • Adolphe E. Bodo:
Samuel Grant, i David 8. UrOWll s
1
Jacob It. Smith, 3lorris Patterson:
C3n I i ue to make Insurance. permanent or limlteo
ery description of property, In town and country
rates as low al are consistent with: security. •
rho (Limp:my have reserved a,large contingent;Fu
which,. with their Capital and Premiums, safely inyes
a rford Ample protection to theinsured.'. Since their
corporation. a period of 18 years they have paid upw
of oae m ill.on, ilea hundred tichusand dollars, losses
tir• . thereby siTonllng eildenie of the advent:incl .) of
r oran'ee, as well we the ability and' disposition t
with promptness, all liabilities.
CHAS. N. BANCICER, Presiden
• Cu AC TI \NCKIM. MCCINAPIFY4
The anbscrlber has been appointed agent for thl. a
nolo t loned I ost,itp tioo. and is now prepared to make"
4, ri uce, on every description of property at thel . lo
rates. ,
-ANDREW RUSSEL..AIten
Pottaville. Jan. 11. 1859 2-If
,•
THE LIVERPOOL AND LONDON FIR
. LrtrugsuiteNct COMPANY. I •
ArritoetzEti CA MAI,-12,000,000, or $10,000,0
Paid upl.l9ltal. Surplus; and Reserspl Fpudr,
$4 4 000,000
; Nearly invested in.this country. 1
Liability of the abarehoktens unlimited.
Titeinconittof this Company lu New Ydrk, for 1
was npwarda of V.100,(410.
The onderargned having been appointed agent% ) oft
above Company, are prepared to receive appliestiOne
rtimrsore scalect Fire. on every description of but
inz, and prpperty. Ine uding coal breakersandtbestr
tures rodnected with collieries. All those parties'
golfing insuralee arorespectfully invited to ealrat
once where particulars will be gWen, together with ti
company's circular, and detailed statement of ilium em
doh', of 'this well known and thoroughly reliable cur]
I
In
ease the amount of lowuranee detsirm.! ereeedi
s of the Lreerm - ml and London the'underittg.ued I
authmized to obtain ft In totter reliable eompanlee. •
Itererettee fs permitted to be made to the follow!
gentlemen:
..tehn Tucker, Esq., .lohn ablapen, 'EN.: •
James Dandae, Earl., (fee. W. Snyder, Drs..'
John It. White. Esq.," Itnn. James ll.. Camp. •
1108 ACY. P. dMITII. and lIENIW W. POOLE, 421/114.
At °Mee On. W /*le, linglneer, Centre et., Pot tindi
Jan. 30,7,3 I
LIFE INSURAYCE. . •
rilfrE (..;:,“rd Life
and Tenet - Company of Ph .adi!phla- place.
Chean4t street, the tint dour &at of the Cue
Howe. • -
Cl VITAL . S3OOO2O—CHARTER rEarsrruz
ittfnuetom 4 keln e:tans on Hinson the moat fa
abln term. •
- The espitsl Ong paid up and Invested, together', I
lacte 310 constantly Incrust , lnd reserved fund, oil'
'a p••rfeel. security totbelaaureA.
The preinlUMl may be paid yt4rly, haltlearly
quarterly,.
rho company add a BOZOS pertodicalli to toe than
for life. The first Bon us, approgriated in broom
' 15t t. an t the swond Bonne in Deftimber..lB49, amo
to an a4 , 111.10u of ;202 60 to every
56
insured' no
th e et,teet polities making $1.262 which ho.P
when shall be come a claim, instead otit,ooo4grg
ally nanree:the next ohleat.amount t0114 23-160 0gb'on -
In age to 11.212 60 for tiger) $1,000; the others In
same .eroPortion according to the &Mount sand
P t nz. which gigitiong make a average of tr
otsnor h
' .per cent. open the premiums paid, without Inc
lug the annual premium.
Thomas Rldgivay, MAN& GELB: . .
Armun Darla.
John'A A. Br own, ' .
• D. Danner. re
. .L. 1,9 Jay Smith, e.trrlale Brown,
Robert Peamsall, Rentz., fiber, '
.r ,, mpla.Yearrar, " 7 John R. Ultlecter,
Thomas e. Jamea, - '. ;Whton LeirtS '..
Je,epli T. Bailey. .Tub blt. Slack.
roamplaletaconlalnlna table qi,ralc!scd earylanatie .
ore, 4t application and further Information van be h
at the eMcr. . . TIIOXA'S RIDGWAY, President
Jon,' f:Janca.eitetuaiy. , .
count
In agent • tbr the above Comm
In Schuylkill county. and will effect 'lnsurances, a
r.,
al neer.aary Information on the subject
r. a l l
1%1458. ia-lv • . B HANNAN
BTAJR.RODJ,
( \VAL and F o ll ow ; a rgot Tack
4,1! , am....re. Le.. at sTrenT&R &1110,1PSONT,
Inrynr. stir." mr Centro and Iliatkot street&
A n, 'AS I, 14-
t p i L. DODSON,
IrVio li titAte. St ßo t aale, Ja d e'. 23..'58 1;
TOSEPH W. GEAsitY,' Civil and Mi
t, Mot Engineer._ Offiee—Vortregian street, Potts
ville, Pa.. 'Panuary 10. 9-
PW. SHEAFFER, Pottsitill&Pa.;
elated( the Pennsylvania State GeologivirSiiivey,
explores lands, mines, Se. [October 13,15 dI:111
GGEORGEBROWN, Mine Inspector,
Pottsville. Inspects. Coal lamb and Mines Partkn.
las attention paid to ventilation. [August 1, 'AI 11141
HENRY PLEASANTS, Civil and
Mining Engineer, POTTSVILLE.
Orriez—Market street, north side, between Centre and
Second. [August 8,'57 82.dm
rents
ants
tieing.
,pg with
16
16 00
DR: CHARLES HERMANSADER,
eurgeois mad Aceoaeher,
olt WIG 9IJ U ltd—Opposlte the Arndt= Institute.
August 29,17 I J .
.A.TKINSON 4 B
General Land Airenay aingnd
!Survey Ogßoo t
KANSAS OkTY,llll3l3oOftl.
January 23,'58 . 4.
' VRANK CARTER, Civil and
rvMin
ing Engineer, Surveyor , Se.. will attend to surveyi
of ands, !nines. town Oita. se. 01114 w lib Saint. Leyte,
Esq., gilt dour below Silver Terrace, Pottsville, Pa.
May 9, '67 . ' ' ' ' • • 19-tt
llovs
Ines •
a half
over
for
• •to
Real
ante.
CLEAVER & CLAPP, - GeOlogical,
Civil and •Mining . Engineers. Conveyancers, and
Real Estate. Agents--opposite the Wyoming Howe,
SCRANTON, Pa. •
D. w. mum." . [ A. P. cue,.
May 2, '57 • - • 17tdrL-
JOHN HODGKISS; Mining • &W
-neer and Surveyor, Centre SL,Pottsville, Pa., at.
tends to Surveying and Exploring Coal Lands, inspect-
I tplillnes„ Ac. Agent for the purchase a'nd sale of Heil
Estate, collection of rents, Le.
March 22, 1869.
T 11. McElwain, Civil and Mining
tl . Engineer, Ashland, Pc, attends to Surveying and
Inspecting Mines, surveying and dividing hinds. regu
lating Town Lots and all other business in the line of
hie profession. I,etter add ssss s Fountain Spring P.
Schuylkill County, Pa. Feb. 23.1858
010. Z. IMITII.I .1. [SON!
.BmlthAt Symons,
Mining and Topogrilphical I.'n,qineers, and alliery
Viewers.
MshEntanco .t Second its., a Ilirsd street.
1
POTTSVILLE, I TAMAQUA.
April 21 'SR 17-t
HENRY• •
• W. POOLE., Geologieal,
Topographical and Mining Engineer, Centrestreet,
Pottsville, t'a.. gives attention to purveys and examine.
tions of Coal Lands, to surveys of Mines re/Inking ape.
Mel accuracy, and to the supelintendence arta entire
charge for proprietors of estates.
February 2,'59 • [July 22,'57 '2.7-tl2-
AGENCY—For the Purekage and
Bale of Real Estate; baying and JAM Coal; ta
tting charge of Coal Lands, Mines, Ake., and collecting
renta—from twenty years experience in the County be
hopes to. give satisfaction. Office Mahantango Street,
tiottgville. [April 6, '5B 14.] CIIAS. M. HILL.
FOUNDRY & MAC .111 F. 14,QP.
fart, a:Arbon, Sonny lig Co.i
• -. T. WINTERSTEEN anionne
n--i ea his readiness, from the complete outfit
frfl MAR oftheabove namedestablishment.tosup•
radz ply all orders In his line of business—
such as for Steam Engines, Railroad and
Drift Cars,vutnps, Coal Breakers, Castings and'llachi na
ry of every pattern. lie warrants his work to give satis
faction, and accordingly solicits patronage at home and
abroad.- .fan. 27.J867 4-/Y
NCE. '
• F RY
m A ( ND
MA c CH rr N , sc SHOP,
wes N O Tl CE.—Thebusinesscf
the late firm
of SNFDXR B 31.1LNES, will be t ontin
tied by the subscriber In all Its various
apla branches of Steam Engine 'mending, Iron
Founder, manufacturer of all kind, of
Machinery, for Rolling Mills, Blast Furnaces, Railroad
Cars, Ike., Le, He will also continue, the business of Min
Rig and Selling the celebrated jltine 1 1 %,bresi White Ash and
Lewis and S:polat Veins Red Ash Coals, being sole proprle
tor of these Collieries. ' 13BORCIE W. BNYDIIII.
January 21.1817 3-tf
a T.T.B
• are con
stantly manufacturing various sixes of
MR , Colliers' Rails. weighing 22, 25.28, 3002
nd 40 pounds per yard. Also, large
" 7.77 Rails of the most approved patterna,
weighing 45, 50, 56 and 60 pounds per yard. From the
experience of the past fire years. we feel confident of
making Bails unsurpassed In quality by any.mill In the
country. All business . communications addressed to
Messrs. Ysantxy k Sox, Iron Factors, Pottsville, will
meet with prompt attention. JNO. BURNISH & CO.
Jane 20, '57 • 25-
PALO ALTO ROLLING MILL.
THE Subscribers beg leave.to an.
nounee to their friends and the public,
t r aFFi IrEggi generally,that their new Rolling BIM at
a th a Palo Alto la now complete, and in full
operation, and that they are prepared to
Parniett.T rails of various ratterns, weighing from to
70 Ma per yard. Alm:, different sisesof flat,agnare and
round merchants' bar Iron.
Orders for rails or bar iron are respectfully solicited,
and will meet with prompt attention If left either at
the Roiling Mill, Bright & • Lerch's Hardware Store.
Centre street, or at their office, N. E. Corner of Centre
and'Alarket streets, ',2d story. HAYWOOD, LEE A CO.
I.'si. 1-tt
TO CO4ll / . OPEIAATOU
pioneer of
The aubserlber er
respectfully Invite the
t Mali attention of the business community to
4 Ft 4411 ; his Boller Worke,on Railroad street, be
' CI • ma; low - the Passenger Depot, Pottsville, Pa.,
where he is prepared to manufacture
BOILERS OF EVI.RI DESCRIPTION,
Smoke Stacks, Air Stacks, Bleat Pipes, Duometers,Drift
Cars, de., tc. Boilers on hand'.
Being a practical mechanic and having for yearadevoted
himself entirely to this branch of the business, he Oat.
tern himself that work done at his establishment will
give satisfaction to all who may favor him with a call—
individuals and Companies will Sod it greatly to t heir,a d•
vantage to examine his work before engaging elsewhere.
Nov. 21, '57 47-to JOUR T. NOBLE.
'E.
ER IFADOWAV I
UDSON L I
Iron and rasa
C Founders,tlltrou;-
E mna,t ,tois.A:taz
-ice z are fully tampered at the above astabllsh
ment, to manufacture St r eam Engines of
every size; Pumps, Railroad and Drift Cars, and every
other descriptlsn of Iron and Brass Castings anitablefor
the Coal mining or other business,on the most reasonable
- ' - owing Cylinders for Blast Furnecee and
general.
I kinds done with neatness and despatch
!es. All work furniahetf by them war
well. TheY:would solicit the custom of
nit articles In their line in this vicinity.
eeet with•immediate and -prompt atten-
S. W. HUDSON,
say W. 8.. 111JDSON
li THE SUBSCRIBERS are now folly
a l r e lp i Long prepared to furnish; at the Ashland Iron
. Works, Steam Engines and Pumpsof any
bik power and capacity, forudning and other
. purposes, Coal Breakers of every.she and
pattern now In use, together with castings and forging*
or every deeeriptione. Coal.and Drill Cara or all sixes
and patterns. large - Truck and Horse Cars,—altfurnished
at the shortest notice. The enbecribers /Satter them
'wives that, inasmuch as every member of the firm lea
praeMal mechanic, they will be able to furnish machi
nery that will compare favorably with any In. the !le
gion. All orders directed to•L. P. GARNER & BROS., Ash.
land, Schuylkill county, Pa , will receive prompt atten
tion. L. P. GARNER.
l o i s ql e A u E
9 1. LA N !KA ,
J•
Ashland, lay 10, ' 10
TLIE Subscriber Is prepared to mann
et facture STEAM ENGINES of any power,
of any capaelty,and Coal any
- 7 um= or every description t' as well as every
ther kind of machinery used 4n Mines,
Breakers. r unwires, Bolling Dl tile. Law 31111 s. dr ,
• From 'the facilities foseessed for ituanuLseturing. and
from long ex*rienee In the funniness, work rairbe turned
nut at this e,tabllshment,at the very lowest prlces,and
of a superior quality.
Persona desirous of putting up machinery of any; kind,
sea invited to call and examine patterns and beconiaac.
puatuted with prices before etntracting elsewhere.
Orders of every kind are solicited, and strict attention
will be given to their prompt execution.
WILLIAM DEITAVEN.
' Mlnersoille, December 9,1817 4B4f
WASHINSTONARTI WORKB.•
rottavil e, aN r
La
TH OS. JAS WREN tespeet tully invite
tr„the attention o thebusiueaseoamunit y 3 totherwmchlneBhopandponndr y
Ibe x are prepared to execute all orders for machinery of
em and " fm be nti t n w g ee o n n eas Nor l w an eg d ia lt n ai st irca ree d t ° , w ree he t r s e
Erase and lrtm, such as Steam Engines, all kinds of Gear.
log for Rolling Mills. Grist and Saw Mills,
Single and
Double acting Pumps, Coal Breakers, Drift Cars, all kinds
of Railroad Castings, Pula as Chairs for Flat and 2' Bail;
Frogs, Switches, ke.: all kinds of cast and wrought Iron
Shafting. Being practical uterhanies.and having made
the demands of the Coal Region their study for years,
also all Muds of Machinery in their line of business, they
flatter themselves that work done at their establishment
will glee satisfaction to all who may honor them with a
call. All orders thankfully received and proutptly ext.
rated, on the most reasonable trans.
,/
THOMAS' WREN, - JAMES WREN, '
N0v.22, '56 •
47-lf•
TRENIONTRRIt WORK", •
Tremont ohm, *misty, ennial.
The Subs c ribersrespectfully invite
theattention of the businesscomninadt
I 7
PARR to their New Machine Ethel, and nun
. ca la dry, erected In the town of Tremont. and
under the superintendence and manage
ment of Messrs. Z. Batdorff and Philip llminiltz. where
they are prepared to execute all orders for Machinery of
Prate and Iron, such as Steam Engines of any power,
Pumps of any capacity, Coal Breakers of every desmip-
Hon, all kinds of Gearing for BollipeMills, Orb t and
Saw 11111 a. Drift Cam and all kindeo ' 'tanned Castings,
Inch as Chairs for Plat and T Bafe,r.ngs, Switches, aad
all kinds of Cast and Wrought Iron Shafting,. Mr. Um.
holts being a practical Meehanic.an d haring had t h e eon-
Mien re and experience for many years In the Coal Region,
persons desirous of, putting up Machinery of any kind,
are Incited to call mad examineour pattern'. and superior
, Ptality of work. and berme acquainted with prices at
these Werke, before contracting elsewhere. Orders ofmr
cry kind thankfully received, and strict attention will he
liven to their prompt execution, haying
. spveral !NZ),
10.40, and 40 horse Engines on hand
• JA n. 6,1357 1-ly C. A. A . A. M. EZLTZER.
• .
, I irtu, TEACH YOU TO FLEECE THE BOWELS OF THE KARTII s Ana BEING OUT PEON THE CATTXTS OF 1101IETAINH, HETALS WITCH WILT. CITE STHENOTH TO OUR ILLY --------'...."=m1.1111.MIMIIIIMIIMIIIIIII.1111.11111111111111111 " ll ' , •
._ J
DS AND S UBJECT ALL NATURE TO OUR ITFE Alla - '
trausung.—Dr:Jii r ' o ,
, i i
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MOIigNINGI BY BENJAMIN BANNAN t POTTSVILLE, SCHUYLKILL COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA.
VOL. XXXIV.
BUSINESS CARDS.
IRON WORKS.
ASHLAND IRON WORKS.
D EHAVIEI e gIR I IVNORK 8,
. .
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EMU&
MANUFACTURES.
PORT CARBON SHOVEL FACTORY.
C blurts. Sunnis. Proprietor. .
All kinds °food shotels, spades, coalriddles As.
The pattontge of the public is respectfully solicited.
January f
WATER METRES.
THE Sub s criber having been author
bed by the maawfsetaters of Water Metro, will
sal ply all orders left with them, at their prices.
E. YARDLEY * SON.
Pottsville. Attend 30,'50 • ' 33.
i‘t
IP • p p R.lsAce,
ATENT A HINE-MADE Paper
Dogs, to, hold Tom Ito 20 po .nds. for°, ocers.Drog
g its sad others, for sae by , E. GARRIGIIKS.
Centro street, Pottsville.
November . 11,.'66 lI I • 454 f
trirtluts" ei tt e t , u h ri a o . A t I w RON.
onhanti
1 and will sell f r CASH, at the lowest market price,
a tame stock of the best quality merchant Bar Iron, Plat
Bar Railroad Iron, ad light T rails, for mines.
R. YARDLEY & SON.'
Pottsville, Harem r MI, '67 48.
EXTENSIVE MARBLE yArec-...
Itausuitoortio St ,Pottsville, es.
IrtißE subscriber is prepared, at his old
stand, to furnish all kinds of materials in Iliallue,_
for ulldlow purpnatts—tdnln and ornamental. H. sif.
vitas particular attentkor to the Tomb Stones and Mono
mials of his manutatiure. They ran be had In every
variety of style, and ;ill compare favorably, In beauty
and Solidi, with any btalned elsewhere. and are offered i
at cheaper rates. JOHN T. LANG..
June 6. '67 - 1 - 23-1,
VULCANIZED RUBBER NOSE,
ibr Hythunts,Lecontoifies, lire Engines, and other pur
, poser.
Tit. HOSE it great advantagei
over leather, as It deeds no oiling, is perfectly
t g t, will stand a very high degree of heat without in- ,
jury, and is nat affected by the severest cold. It can be
tied of any size from% Inch to 3 inched inside dieme ,
ter—larger sites made tuotder. Also, Couplibgs, Branch
Pipes, *c. Formic by • 11. BANNAN. -
' Pottsville. May =,1.7,
WILLIAMSPORT PLANING MILL,
•
BETWEEN NUL
81/1/bnrY & Erie Railroad and the Canal .
Opposite the Furnace., Williamsport, Penna.)
G ". ,, S. BANGER & CO., Whole
sale and Retail Dealers and Manufacturers of white
and yellow pine flooring boards,saah, doors,biln ds,shut
lila, siding, wood mouldings, &c. Jig and stroll sawing,
fanny and plain. All descriptions of t oriklngand planing
done with promptness, and in the best Manner. .
February 27. '5B y-
NOCE.
To Coil Operators an d Moinstlll.lll.Counw
ty Merchants.
SMOKING TOBACCO; Steap
pOwer-400lbsin day, at Hamlaufg. Smoking .lobar
co and liegar Manufactory, on band and ready fot•sale.
200 barrels sweet Scented SznokinisTobaceo.
'mom) Half Spanish Sagan.
200,000 Sixes, Spanish Segura..
100,000 Seed and Extra Seger,.
Orders thankftilly received and promptly attended to.
Terms easy. MAItrANN MOYER. -
Hamburg, Barks County, Pa.
Sept. 5. '57 30.t.f •
PIANOS AND MELODE ONS
Of the best tuanufssetnee..w ted,
yOR SALE BY THE ffiligp
subscribeirAll Pianos and Melo • .
eons sold by Nuf will be warranted—if
not what they are represented, they, can be returned.—
All kinds of Melodeons will ho sold it Manufacturers'
cash prices In Pottsville, by which the purchasers-save
the carriage and risk of transportation. Pianos will be
sold from $lO to P 3 less than regular city prices-accord
ing to the value of the instrument. Those who preterit
by railing on us, and receiving a letter of credit, can
nuke their own selectionsat the Manufact urera. ascertain
the prices, and we will furnish the instrument selected
at the above rates. If there is any doubt in this Lat.
ter—all we have to say is—TUY US.
• MAUCH CHUNK
Wire Rope Manufactory,
iineeisea- Mies= arc/6
Manntitetnrer of Wire Hope, for Inclined planes, shafts,
slopes, a.c., would Inform the public that be Is now pre
pared to make -
ALL KINDS, LENGTHS AND SIZES PLAI
AND ROUND ROPE.
At the shortest notice, of superior .quality, and on the
most liberal terms, at his Wire Rope Factory,
to Mauch Chunk, Carbon Co., Pa.
Reference can be made to Messrs. R. A. Douglas, N. D.
C,ortright and A. Broadhead, at Manch Chunk to N.
Patterson, Summit Hill. to Sharpe. Lelsenring d Co., Til
more, Lnserne county,. Pa.. and In Pant. nearly all the op
, 'orators in the Region who have been using his ropes.
August 8.'87 .
MINERS' SAFETY LAMPS.
A laspealer Artiste.
TEE SUBSCRIBER .has just re-
p.,,eehrei from New Castle., England, a lot. of Davy's
Wprkl lag Lamps, made under the lusausetkrerdf
lieEriglikE Siff utkolirit liiit, — "of — Tha — beitt quality
'wire gauze.. Alen, Gauss Covers made ready for use, for
these Limps. There are the best Safely Lamps ever In
troduced into this County, and &refer salewholesaleand
retail at abtiot,the cost' of inferior Lamps. AlsoMre
Gauze by the yard, and Lamp Brushes by the dozen or
simile. A 1.,, the Clanney, Lamp, for Bosses and Mine
Viewers. Thislamp it covered with a thick Glass, and
gives an increased light which is of Importance to Mine
Viewers. BENJ. BANNAN.
irThese Lamps can be put into a box Oiled with
ex
plosive gas, and moved rapidly backwards and forwards
without any covering, and will not explode. - ,
August 8,'57 • • ' 32- '
CARRJACE FACTORY REMOVED.
Itir; unUersigned - .reap =ctfully /em-.
brace this opportunity of Infer g •
the public that they hare remov ,;` A r j - - 7
extensive Carriage Factory, from ucb
Chunk street, where they have been
store the late fire, to their New, Large and commodious_
building, in Write Addition, on ,the old site, where
they are prepared to turn out CARRIAGES EQUAL TO
E BEST IN TUE STATE and ready to accommodate'
theircustomers and all those who may faroethern 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
Surpassed.
They will continue to attend to the busineashereatter
e befilre,withtietermituttiotito give geueral satisfac
tion
ICS-A II orders will ieeeliiipronipt attention.
Sir Repairing done at the shdrtest notice.
July 18.'51 ABRIGIIT t BURIEUABD.
PATENT COAL SLATER. '
WHEREAS, Letters Pa&nt of the
Y.lr United States, bearing date the 24th day No.
veinber. A. lk, 1857, were granted to the Undersigned for
"A New and improred Machine for Slating Call,"
NOTactE is therefbre, hereby given that coal operators
and others can now - purchase "'tights". to build ind use
the said Slating Machines for counties or &limb, collier
ies. Parliel inteiested in Ibis laborsaving , ntwful and
economicatinventlon, can see the "Slater" in operation
at Trevorton, Northumberland countyr-Pc - Any o
.fringooleat, directly or Indirectly, of the said Patent,
wltl tie prosecuted to the full extent of the law.. of the
'United States relating to Patents and Patentees.
- JACOB GASS, )
t4E08(44: MOWTON.I Patentees.
Trevorton, Northumberland county,'Pa.
Sa-A working model of the above machine may be
examined at Wm. C. Smith's Machine Works, at Potts.
vine. For terms, Lc., in Schuylkill county, apply to
tiEOIIOE MAlt 17, Pottsville.
Febniary 24,18 • t 8-3 m
- ' • POTTSVIkLE
Saddle and liarnesa .111 *unlace ory.
IHEREWITH - invite
,your especial
attention to my very extensive stock of Ready Nada
ddlerm, Ilarusis, Whirs. do- embracing the largest
'variety ot styles and qualities ever offered for sale In
this county, and at prices that will compara.favorably
with those of any other house in the trade. v - 1 .- ,- •
kt ,..„.., Haring been. for some years past,. •
%-,.. ~, in the habit of purchasing my •
Rine Natcriailzedruirely for Ouh,:
I find myself now In thin possession of advantages from
this cause not enjoyed by the trade generally, and feel
that I ran, with confidence, Follett the trade of all classes
of dealers; and my arrangements for the, coming sea
son's trade are based upon even a larger amount of busi
ness Mali I here hilherta„ldone; you can therefore rely
upon II tiding at my establishment everything that Is re
quired in my line. . '
Orders by malt are retpcettully solicited , and the ataxia
Bent warranted to give satisfact lon, both se to price and
quality, WOMELSDORPE.
Oppn . sit, RepiseopalChurch,Gbatrestrect, rbetsrair-
March 7.1857 - 11}1y
SOLOMON HOOVER.
Wholesale rad Retail
D EALER in Stoves, Ranges,
11 ,
lieste , Tin Ware, Hollow Ware, Brl
taula Wart, Dram Ware. French Ware, and
Cutlery, Ra e Boilers, Portable Kangas, Ras
Ovens, Rum er Furnace, JO., Ice., hu added
fp his :fernier stock of Stoves. a variety of new pat=
terns of Kitchen Ranges of 'which he ean.,give the
highest recommendation.
lie calls particular attention to his new style of Wes
ter which he is confident will make the best Hester that
,lrna ever been used In this part or the country, also, si,
variety of new patterns of Cooking, Parlor, and Hall,
' Stoves.: Vie rails particular attention to his sheet iron
Parlor Stove, it is an Improvement on thp libtertateh,
which be is confident is the best stove in me. He has
now the largest stock of the above • articles (too numer
ous to men tiou,) that bas ever been offered In this part
of the country. Ile Invitashle friends and customers
to rail and examine for themselves. feeling confident
that he can suit them in quality and price; he, flatters
himself that he has had much experience In his line of
business: therefore he feels confident that be cannot be
surpassed in quality or cheapness.
Sirßoollng hod Spouting and all kind, of jobbing
done at the shortest notice. ...
&litre greet, bdoorsabovveNarLet,eoest side, ibatrakt.
March 21; '67
SCHUYLKILL COUNTY LUMBER
MANUFACTiMINC COMPANY
Avis, on and at the r exten,lve estanoMunent, on
Railroad street, a great quantify of Wilber of every kind
And description. which they ran supplyAO Operators,
tiartenters and Builders, at lower fates than* it can be
bought elsewhere. They are also ready to supply,
through the means of their extensive business. and la
borsaving machines, manufactured articles la theirline
. at a saving of 21 per eent.on former coat.
Their large Workshops hare been In stieeessfof opera
tion for the past year, turning out vast quantities of
Doors, • • Window Promos,
Bosh Panel Work,
Moulding., Bed-posts,
Blinds, Haunt
hia ttttt
'And 411 ' 1.61 4 of Fra S med, liaatial mid Turned -Work,
Which they haveronstantly on hand: They are ready
to assents orders at the shortest notice, for any quantity
or quality of sawed or manufaeturod stuff.
Dry and green Hemlock, of all kinds, for bnildingpnr
mum Oak, Maple. Poplar;ehair plank and scantling
boardif Cherry, Walnut, Maho gany, de., for cabinet
_work; White and Yellow Pine boards me locoing, raw or
made to order; WhiteoPine plank, a, 24, 2, 154,134, %
and 34 hub panel, always ready; also, plankr beams,
mile, scantling, posts, shingles, lath, calling lath, pall.
og. &c., Cc.
n-n 11)i of awed stuff and everything In their Min
on hood or to order, it the shortest notice • '
Pottsville, March :M i le Ilh
poljtiptlrouoin9.
TO MIR -
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITRD STATES. •
' Letter Simettenth.
"Nothing," .says Hume, "is - etteemed a more
certain sign of the flourishing condition of any na
tion, than the lowness of interest"—or, in other
words, the moderation of the - charge for the use of
that greatest of all the instrninents used by man--,
cailed.money. It is, Mr. President, an evidence
of the existence of that feeling of security which'
always attends atlvance of civilisation—the TAM
of interest being very high in all countries is
which property is insecure, and declining stiadily ,
as we pass outward, toward* those in which men
are more and more enabled ito combine their ef
forts for tho promotion of the common food—in
which - population and wealth increaseitt which
the land-becomes more pioductive—.-in Which the
~ pioductive-- 7 .., ......._ _
prices of raw materials tend to rise; and those of
finished commodities to 1111+ -and in which, eon
seipently, the power to purchase the precious met;
als augments (rum year to year.' . 1
That power, and the tendency to decline in the
rate of interest, exist In every community, In the
precbuiratio of the 1110104 of the eircalition or
labor and its products. The mote perfect the ex-.
!sting supply of money, and the more . it Is util
ised, the more rapid" is the circulation, ind the
greater the tendency to increase in the ability for
T
further purchases. ii less the alipply, and the
lest it is utilised, tbe t slower is the rocietary eir
culetionyand the grey er is the 'tendency to lose
the money that hat before been porehased. In
the one cue, labor obtains power over capital,and
the rate of interest, falls. In the other—capital
obtaining increased control over labor—the rate
of interest rises. The first of these -classes of
phenJmena obtain., in all tile' countries,
ma= that
follow in the lead of France-4 porting.. raw a 7
tubas, and exporting the pro ucts 'of their soil
in the most perfect form. The second is found in
all of those that follow in the direetiotf now ind)7
eared by England—exporting the rude products
of, the soil, and re-Importing them again in
finished elate; as is the ease with Ireland, India,
Jamaica, Portugal, Turkey, Mexico, and all this
States of Southern America.
In further proof of this, we may take the :vari
ous phenomena presented to ourselves, as ouVpol
icy has changed from time to time, within the
last half century. In the period of free trade
that followed the close of the great European
war, circulation almost ceased—labor was every
where wasted—production was small—and money
was scarce and high. In that which followed the
passage of the highly,,protective act of 1828,
everything was different—the circulation' having
then been rapid, labor in demand, production
great, and money low in price. The scene being
once more changed, pioduction declined, while
money rose with great rapidity—becoming, at
length, so entirely unattainable, that banks sus
pended, States defaulted, and' the Federal gov
ernment was wholly bankrupt. The protective
policy being again adopted, production increased
with great rapidity, while the rate of interest
foil. It has now been high for years, and fur the
reason that ',induction has been steadily and regu
larly declining in its ratio to the population. In
proof of this, we have, 'Mr._ President, the fact,
that the, consumption of food, cloth and iron,
bears now a smaller proportion to the numbers of
the people, than it did ten years since. The facts
•
of the Fast three years thee correspond, exactly,
with those observed in those that followed 1836.
Money was then high—f4eign loans -were large—
and emigration to the Wen was great. ,Si.ecula
lion was then rife, as it so recently has been; -hut
daily diminution of production Mid the foundu
lion of the distress and:ruin, that beeame so uni
versal in 1842.---_ - -
B. BANNAN
That real vro l sperity is totally inconsistent with
an advancinic late of interest, is a fact whose
truth proved by every chapter in the world's
history: In th:.st direction lie centralization and
slavery = increatie in the charge for the use of
*money being eTidence of growth in the power of
the accumulations of the pu t peer 'the - labor of
the present—of capital over labor. ',lin proof of
this we have the fact that throughout an impor
tant portion of the Union the pro slavery feeling
keeps steady pace with the exhaustion of the land
consequent upon the export of its products in their
rudest shapes, with the export of the precious
metals, and with the inekeaso in the price of
mony.
Money is often spoken of as capital; and'thos
we are told that interest is blab, hecaose,'"espital
is scarce." There would, however, be as :width
propriety In saying, that rents, tolls, or freights,
were Idgbpheesutist, —' -
alwayx,high, when money, from whatsoever
cause, is scarce; and the high price then•paid for
its use, cause - a deduction from the .pr,lts of the
trader, from the rents of houses, and „Cum, the
freights of ships. The owner of money' thin
profits at the espense.of all Other capitalists; In
terest is the compensation paid for the use of the
inornment cuffed money, and for thatialone. In
countries in which it is high, the rate of profit is
necessarily so, because.the charge for thq use of
money enters so largely into the trader's calcu
lations.
-The high profits of oar - Western States are said
to be the cause of the high interest that is paid;
bat here, as everywhere, modern political econo ,
my substitutes effect for CAUSO. Interest there is
high, because money—the thing for which, alone,
interest is paid—is scarce; and because its sear
eity'enahles the men who can command the nse
of machinery i of exchange, to obtain large profits,
by means of standing between the producer who
needs advances on his corn, and the consumer who
requires credit on his cloth and. iron. Wherever
it is scarce, circulation is sluggish; the waste of
the physical and mental power is great; and the
man who can then command the nee of that
dispensable machinery, becomes even more the,
master of him who desires to use it, than the
transporter dove, when crops are large, and'ehipa
are scarce.
Malty experience, Mr. President, teaches the
farmer that, when money—the machine by means
of which exchanges are made from hand to hand—
circulates freely, be becomes more prosperous from
day to day; whereas, when it is scarce, and cir
culates slowly, his prosperity disappears. It is
not capital that is needed, but money—the ma
chine by help of which the products of labor and
'eapital.are kept in motion, and Without which
they can moveotgy in the fashion of primitive
times, when skins were traded for knives and cloth.
Oar actual capital in houses, lands, factUries, fur
naces, mines, ships, roads; canals and) other simi.
Jar property,las in the last ten years, been in
creased by the application of labor to the extent
of thousands of millions of dollars, and yet we
everywhere see roads half finished, and unlikely;
soon to be completed, although laborers are seek.
lug employment; mills stopped fur want of de.
unindfir their products; laborert unable .to toll of Old. Commerce, so far as regards the rale of
their labor, and men of business compelled to cur. labor, has almost ceased to exist. Why is it so?
tail their operations, because of the difficulty ex. DMUS° money has ceased to circulate, and in,tbe
perienced in obtaining the means with which to absenceof tbateirculstiun,thesocietiry movement,
pay their debts. Why in this so? Nut, certain- Wl6l commerce, can have no existence. Why
ly, because of any diminution 'ef capital, for that has it ceased to circulate f Because confidence
isgligatir than , it has ever been. , has wholly disappeared. Why bixit disappeared ?
Will it possible now to announce that, by rea. Let us inquire.
ion of any change of policy, the export. of gold ;History as we are-tell s is philosophy teaching
would be stopped, and that the quantity in the by centuple. What, then, does history telt is?—
country would *Wadi!) , be increased by retaining Wheo has confidence moat prevailed ? Has it not
bete the produce of California, money would forth: been in the closing years of the three protective
with beiome abundant, circulation would recom. periods—those periods in which there was an ie.
menee, and prosperity would reign throughout the want. flow et the Piccione metals? When has it
land; and yet, the difference in the ensuing year moat entirely disappeared? .Ilas it not been in
would not amount to a goiter of no per cent. of the closing years of the three free trade periods--
the vane of the loud and labor of-the country.— those periods In which gold and silver flowed
Capital would be increased by a portion so minute outwards'? When has the price of money
as scarcely be discernible, and yet the money been most regular? Hu it not been in the
value—the value at which it would be exchanged protective periods? When has it been most ir.
—would be augmented by thousandrof millions, regular? lies it not In the free trade ones?.
At present all is 'stagnant, and therein little,force. When have we become rich and strong? • Has it
Then, all becoming life and motion, the force ex: not been in the protective periods I When have
cried viola be greet.' 'we become gradually poorer and weaker—ending
Ii is not however, Mr. President, in the quanti. with general bankruptcy ? Has' it not been Ire
ty of money held by a community that we aro to the free trade periods? When has labor acquired
final the test of its prosperity or tbp index to,the rate power over capital ? Has it not been in the pro.
of toterest.ibut in the rapidity Alb which it clean. tective periods ? When has capital aequired pew.l
elates.- Sieddiness and regularity, in the motion of er over.labor? Has it nut been in the free trade
society are requisite for the production of coati. periods ? To theta) questions, the answer must be
'demi!, and increase of motion and force results in the affirmative—our tendency in the- one hay- .
from confidante. The gel4.lield by the banks, the fog always been, towards localisation and freedom,'
peopid and the government, is said to exceed, by, and in the other, as regularly towards centratisa
-more than $150,000,090, what was held but a feie. tiun and slavery.
years.sinee ; but, there beibg no regularity in the Such, Mr. President, having been the law of
t'oeletaiy movement, credit-is mach I impaired.— t h e - fast , what i s to be t h at ;' e f th e riainre t, i f
As a eonsequence of this it hi that the eirealation . pretender' has given us wealth,streogth v eredit
is sluggish, and that the rate of interest has, a
for nd pineal.; in the pest, meat ik not do the same in
~
yore, been so very high RS greatly to limit the the future? If th e system called f r e e ise d e h as
ditposition to engage in any operations requiring given us poverty, distrust 'and weakliest in the
time for their completion. The moneyed capital. past, can it du otherwise id the future ? As sured.
lit profits by this, obtaining double or; qiadruple ly not, and for the reason that it looks to the ex.
the usual rate 'of interest; bet the miner, the haustion of the soil, the impoverishment , of the
founder, the cotton - spinner and the cloth maker farmer, the increase of the power of the trader
have been and are being rained by it. largoods and money, the annihilation of the pow.
The existence of, credit is an evidence of the ex. er to obtain the machinery required fur reducing
istencerof that confidence of man in his fellow the labors of production, and the' destruction of
'man which always attends thegrowth of real air. confidence of man in bit fellow men. So long as
Mutton. How it tends to stimulute the eocietary that , system shall be continued, there can be no
motion, and thus to augment the pi - eductive pow.
.general. revival of confidence, because property
..er. is so well exhibited by a recent Prenth eeono. must, and iilrbecome less and lese secure. Thai
mist, that lam induced, Mr. President, to present it may be revived, it is needed that the. central
for your consideration - the following extract from government change its system—abandoning at
his work • mace, and forever, the ides of taainteining a hard
"On one aide," says R. Cornelia, "we seen ma. money currency while pursuing a policy tendiugt
ellinist, i blacksmith, and a wheelwright whose to the expulsion of the precious metals, and that
shops are eloied, not's:aitaki' becalm of any want , of building tint great foreign commerce, byaid of
measures tending to destroy the &media one.
of raw material', but because of abeam* of 4e and
for their products. Elsewhere, are manufacturers That further piogreas,' in its present direction,
in want of machinery, mad farmers in need of art. must be productive of effects the most disastrous,
I cultural implements. Why, now, is it that these, will be obvious to you, Mr. President, on a care.
latter do porgies to the former the orders for want ful study of the facts presented fur consideration.
of which they continue idle ? Because these latter by the last few years. With a larger supply of
mutt be paid in money; which money the other. the precious metals than we before possessed,
cannot at the moment pay; and yet they have, but without theituallest confidence in the duration.
in shops or barns,abundanee of 'commodities that jof the apparent prosperity, gold has, been secreted
they desire to fell, and by the possession of which I to such an extent, tbat the price of money has t m i n
many of the neighboriog people would be greatly so high as to hare proved utterly destructive to the
served. Why do they Iziot exchange? Because— really working men of the commuulty—all their
direct exchange beingtinponible—they Reel eom.' apparent profits having been absorbed by the pay.
memos by selling; and, as they in tnreiskaust de. meht of usurious interest. Mills, factories, mines,
mend money, they can find no purchasers.- Hereand.furnaces, as a consenaenew t have beets elated,
we bate a suspension of labor on both sides, and s, I to the utter ruin of their owners. - Workmen, of
it Is in' cases this that production is languid aU descriptions, have been obliged to peek in that
and society vegetates, although surrounded by all Welt the food denied, to them &theme. • There er.
the-elements ofjllk, modes and prosperity.. rived,-they have found the public landsaartopo.
• "Mans might, however, be found for removing. apecolators, to hem they have 'beau
SAT RDAY MORNING, MAY 15, 185 a
• difficulty that th as exists. If the machinist. the'
blacksmith and the wheelwright, refuse to deliver
their products, except for ready money, it is .not
because of any doubt they entertain of the future
solveney of the farmer, of the manufacturer • but
because it is inconvenient to them to' MAW Credit
gales that would diminish their active capital, and
perhaps disable them from continuing their opera !
tient. let each one, then In delivering his articles,
as he has confidence in the future ability of those
who now demand them, require .only. in piece of
money, a note that, in his turn, he can use, with
those - who furnish him.. On this condition circu
lation will be re-ettablisbed;'-and 'labor will be
resumed. Trpis, but we mast first be sure that
these noes, - when accepted, will tie received
elsewheas, as, otherwise, it becomes at once a
simple tele on credit. his certainty, however,
cannot ha obtained, and therefore they refuse the
notes, not because of any suspicion of theirsul,
fixate value, but because of doubts of the pew&
bility of disposing of them. Al this moment a
bank intervenes ' and says : 'Yoe, machinist, de.
liver 'oat machinery; you, blacksmith, your in.
strumeute ; you, ploughman, your raw materials;
you, manufacturer, your manufacturer; accept with
conddeuce, notes p aye ble'a t a futon time provided
you have full belief in the goodness of those who
will thus become your debtors. I will take charge
of all those -notes, and bold them unsil they shall
become due—giving: you In exchange other notes,
issued by me, that you will bo Certain to find of
universal acceptation: Forthwith all difficulty is at
so end-- - esdes being made, goods circulating, and
?
produediii becoming animatcd There are no
longerniw, materials, instruasen nor products of
any'eftiptien, remaining, eye, for a moment,
unemi.loyed." • . •
There is, here, Mr. President, no change in tbe
quantity of eapital owned by the•community, and
yet its Spernbers are seen passing from a state of
apathy end idleness to one of activity and produe.
ixivenesa—enabling every one to sell 61310:or—re
ceiving in exchange the commodities required for
the eertsumption of wives and families, wito be.
...
fore were like to soffer forwattt el the common ne
cessarily of life: Whit, however, is it thee - gives'
•value t$ these notes, and Idyls it that they Circu
late saxnuch more freely than those of the black
'midland the , farmer? Because 'there exists in
the community a confidence that behind them stands
a pilf Of stoney eufficient to redeem each and every
one of them, whenever, and koweer, presented.
Without the existence of that belief, they would
not circulate, as would soon be seen, were here
established a drain of gold—producing a steady
diashattion of the qtiantity in the poisession of the
bank, until at length.even a single note failed to be•
paid oa presentation. From that moment their
circulation would be stopped ; the suspension of
movement would again take place—the black
smith, the machinist, nad the Wheelwright, again
mourning °veriest:umbras that they would glad
ly exchange for food and clothing; and the farm
er and manufacturer suffering from the difficulty
of obtaining machinety, for the better' production
of food and. clothing. Roney is to society what
fuel is to the locomotire, and food to the man—the
cause of motion ' whence results power. Withdraw
the fuel, and the elements of which water' is Cent
paled cease to move, and the machinery becomes
stationary. Withdrawal of the food from man, is
rationed by paralysis and death ; and.such, pre
eisely, is the effect of failure of the necessary'sup
ply of money—the producer of motion among the
elements of which soc i ety is composed.
_
' When, therefore, the farmer ciimplitins that -mo
ney is scarce, and tho laborer, mechanic, and ma
nufacturer repeat the complaint, they are right. It
is money that i 4 needed, and their common sense
does not in any manner dcceive them. In every
country of the world, pleasant feelings are excited'
by tearing of the incoming of gold and silver, bo-
Cane. therewith are issuciated ideas of activity
and energy ; while, 6n the:contrary, fear and sor
row are excited by their outgoing—there being
therewith associated ideas of dullaees, inactivity,
suffering and death. The former,Mr. President,
have been the feelings prevalent throughout this
country in tho clueing years of the several trials
we have made of the protective policy—to wit, to
1816,1834, and 1846—the preCious metals having
thee flowed in, curiidence having been mutual,
and money having been readily obtainable at the
legal rate of interest. The latter feelings have
prevailed in the closing years of every trial of the
free-trade system—those metals having then flowed
out;—conadence baring disappeared—and the
charge for the use of money having raogoil from
12 to 50 per cent.
The cense of all theAfferenoes then observed, is ,
to be found in the fact that, in t6ii first, the
Of the central government has tended to promote
-I `etewth of combination among ottryeople-to in
erase the fiiellitres Of exchange—Mind Se . soinuelit
production; whereas, : in'the other, it has tended to
destroy the power of association—to lessen the fa
cilities of intercotirse—and to diininieb the produc
tive power. In the one, we have•been enabled to
obtain improved machinery—passing from the
turnpike to the railroitil—from the sailing ship to
the steamer—from the hand.loton to the power
loom—and from irredeemable paper money to a
real speCie circulation. - Id the other, our umehi-,
nery has steadily deteriorated—railroads going to
ruin—steamers diminishing in number—the spin
dle and the loom giving place to the wagon—and
specie disappearing, to be replaced , by the incon
vertible notes of cities, countica,.and banks, and
of the national treasury itself.
Diminution in the rate of interest, Mr. Presi
dent, is on evidence of advancing civilization.—
With us the rate increases, and therefote it is that
each abecessise year brings with it new , combina
tions for procuring a repeal of the laws liMiting
the rate at which.toormy may be lent. The cause
of all this is to be found in the fact that the policy
of the central gorernntept looks steadily towards
an increase in the power of tho trader, and in the
tax of transportation—augmenting. as it does the
,quantity .of shipping ?citified for - transporting
an, given value of our prcducts, and thus dimin
ishing'Me poirrer, to purchase that highest andbeat
of all the machinery of exchange, called Money.
Under a different syetem that paver would steadi
ly increase. and usury laws would gradually die
out—the standard rate of interest falling below
the legal one.' All the efforts fur . ° tho repe al of
those laws ;mei° ho regarded only us furn ishing
additional evidence of the groat tog power of capi
tal over labor—always • characteristic. of decli
ning civilisatiuo.
Cur ptesent condition, Mr. President, is precise
ly-similar to that described in the above extract
from M. Coquelrn'il excellent little book. With a
large supply Of lands, houses, corn, cotton, and
other cotnmotlities.and.tiangs, we have little com
merce among out:Selves. Corn abounds, but the
laborer-perishes for.warirof food. House's abound,
but wives and obilared:wander through our streets
for want of Shelter. Ships abound, but their
owners are ruined fur want of freights. Coal
abounds, and yet men, women and children perish
ple
lee.,
of t o b br e lit o rildik. utse ltiot t il o Pae f ra th di r ou ir ibl o ti persi ee;t"Lre' U b on ie s, o th r e 'rg y helisd h s av Pri ti ll . a P'il eorn a4 .
polled to borrow . money, paylog4or ita ea., at
every We from 20 to 70 per wt. a year. • ins
babble haring bent, thiyifind themselves in the
bands of their usarioini +-tedium, a$ now, the
Sheriff will complete the; work: I
The_whole policy of the. central government
tends thus to the annihilation-of the reallyloss.
fal portion of society ;land- to the !aggrandise
ment of traders in coney, In lacid, in cloth sad
cotton, in principles, acd in men;` and,as a spew
sary consequence, the-demoralisation ;of society
becomes more complete with each sumuivii i year.
The range of honest employment becoming daily
more and more restricted, men are -driven, by
sheer necessity, to engige in schemes of piablio
and private plunder, from whlch,^under otheri!it
comstances, they would - shrink back, shudlenng
ca at n th eu el e r h ve a ty sta tton o g f ht t . bi l gu low en lo d n u g re ,
t ilfr.i m Pre i4 sldent.
possi
ble, under such a coarse 'of operation, to 118114 up
a stable system ? That it.is not, Is proved by all
the facts of history. A Change most come in the
policy of the government, or the goviiimmeit it
self will undergo a change.
The commerce that foe, Mr. President, have ao
welniescribed es beiiig.the sorfof free4raitelthat
we really need; is all that Is required to render
money abundant and wily obtainable; at a mcgi T
erate interest,- with largir poider to obtain
steamers, money, and all other inachinery, thin is
now possessed by any other • community 'of the
worlds Give the peoplibut that commeres,lind
confidence will be at one! restored. , I
Yours, +Cry respectfully, '
;HENRY C. eentor,4
Philadelplia; Febrwaoo 12th, 1858. ,
A Colt oflOrbtr fik
The Peril of the Border.:
'While reading reeeptls an account of thisfriOt
ful massacre of "'arena," white families by! the
Black-foot Indians, we were remind...l of a thril
ling event which occurref in the "Wild West" a
short lime subtiequent todhe Revolution,'ln wbich
a highlj accomplished yipung lady, the daughter
of a distinguished'ittleer of the American Army,
• • r
played ap Important part. The story being tif a
must thrilling naiure, and exhibiting in 'a 'trilling
manner the "Perils of tae Bortler,"l, we have i?con . -
eluded to give an eitrt4t from liTas origi4tifi
published, as follows: I - I
The angle on the right bank of the Great 'ka.
nawha formed by'its jutiction with the 'Oh*, is'
called 'Point Pleasant, add felt place of bistor,ical
note. Here, on the 10th of October, 1774, during
what is known as Lord Duntnore's IVar, 'ltem;
fought one of the fiercest and moet desperatchat
tles that ever took place betweeu thu Virginians
and their forest foes.
After the battle in,question, in which the Indi
ans were defeated with great loss, a fort was here
erected by the victors, which became a post of
great importance throughout the sanguinary
smells of strife whicit almost immediately fol lined,
and which_ this section of the countryj were Con
tinued for many years lifter that - establoduntlit of
peace which acknowledged the United Coluniels of
America a free and indapendent nation.l • . 1 .,.
At the landing of the fort, on the day our 'story
open', was fastened a flat-boat of the .kind Used
by the early navigntors'of the Westerd rivers!. .
Upon. the deck oT this boat, at' the Moment we
present the same to the reader, aloud five indiirid
eats, alike engaged iti watch. rig a. group of Per
sons, mostly females, who were slowly approach
ing the landing. .Of these flee, one was a stout,
sleek negro, in partial livery, and evidently a
house or body servant • three were boatmen and
borderers, as indicated by their rough, broils:ad
visages and coarse attire; but the fifth. was a
young Wan, some two.and-twenty years of age, of
a fine, commanding person, and a clear, open, in
telligent countenance; and in the lofty carriage
of his 'bead—in the gleam of his large, bright,
hazel eye—there was something %hitch doubted
one of superior mind; but as we shall have o;.ca.
lion in-the 'course •Of our narrative to fully eat
forth who andwhat Eugene Fairfax war; we will
leave him fur the present, and, turn to the ap
proaching group, whom he seemed to be regar log
with lively interest. ;
Of tbisgroup, composed of a puddle aged aza`n
and four females, with a black female servant:del
lowing some five or six. paces 'in-.the rear, there
wee' one whom the most casual eye wouldive
singled out and rested Kim re. e
with pleasure.
lady in question, was apparently about tsi Tay
l b
years of age, of a slender and graceful figure Ind
of that peculiar cast of feature, which, besideil be
ing beautiful in every lineament, rarely ; fade to
affectibe beholder with something like a charm.
Her traVellog eostumea One, brown habit, hi g h
in the neck, buttoned closely over the busem end.
coming :down .ta her small, pretty - 'feet, without
palling on the ground—was both neat and becom
ing;, and with her riding-cap and its waving os-.
trich plume, set gaily above her flowing curls,lher
appearance contrasted retell:4y with the •rutigh,
unpolished looks of the' of her sex besideter,
with their tinny bed.goirns, scarlet tintinel psttl
coats, and bleached linen cape. 1
- . .106, Blanche,"'saidPane of the more venerable
of her female companwes, pursuing a conversa
tion which had been maintained' since quitting
the open fort behind them, "I cannot bear to!. let
you go& for it jut seems to. me as if something
were going to happen to you, and when I feel that
way. something generally does happen." I
"Well,• aunt," returned Blanche, with a light
laugh, "I do not doubt iu. the least that something
will happeoL-for I expeet one of these dap to'
reach my dear father and blessed mother, and
giveltheas such an embrace eats deelrout a disti
ful daughter to her parents--=aid !hit - will! be
something that has net 1 happened for , ' two long
years at least." 1.
"But .I don't mean that, Blanche ," returned,l
-
other, somewhat petulantly; "and you just laugh
like a guy and thoughtlets girl; when you °tight
to be serious. Because Yost have come safe ,taus
far ' through a partially alined country. you think,
perhaps, your own prett face wilt ward off dan
ger in the more perilous wilderness—but I warn
you' that a fearful journal is before you! Scarce- 1
ly a bear descends the Ohio, that does not enconn. ,
ter more or lea. peril fruth the savages that prowl
along either ybore; and 1 some: lof them that' go
down freighted with bunko life,l are heard of no
more, and none ever return to tell the tale." - i
"But why repeat this ; to me, dear aunt," Ira.
turned Blanche, with • mom serious air, "when
yen know it is may destiny, either good or bad. to
attempt the voyage? MY parents have sent I fur
11:10 to join them in their new home, and it is my
duty'to go to them, be this peril what it may."l
"Yaw uever did know What it was to fear 1" fel..
seed thesood woman, rather proudly. . ;; No,"lbe
repeated, turning to the; others, "Blaiihe ter.
trend never did knosi what it was to fear, I 'be
lieve!" • , 1 , 1
"Just like bey father it joined In the btubind
of the matron, the brother of Blanche's mother,
the eommander of the nation, and the. middle
aged gentleman mentioned as one of the party;
"a true daughter of a Ude soldier. Her father,
Colonel Philip"-Bertrand; Owl bless him for st t rue l
heart! never did; seem th know what It we{ to
fear—and Blanche is Juin like him." i •
By this lime the partlidi had reached the lout;
and the young man already described—Eugene
Fairfax, the secretary ef Blanche's. father.—a t'. ,
once st4ped forward, and, Ina and• defer
ential manner, offerer) his band to the different fe- ;
Inake, - to assist them oo board. The, band of
Blanche was tho.last to !Ouch hisand thou ;but '
slightly, as she sprung qtiickly and lightly to the
deck.--but a close observer might have &kited
the slight !josh which minded his noble, expiu.
sive features, as hisr i fer a,single instant met
hers.. • She might h self bare seen it—perhaps
she did—but there was nikorresponding glow! on
her own bright, pretty fUe, u she Inquired, Wale
calm, dignified tone of one Laving the right to:pet
;Ake question, end who might also have been at
of the inequality of. position between herself and
himshe addressed: ;
"Eugene, is everything prepared for our do
re re
to, It will not do•for i oar boat to rpringis k
again; Its it did coining down the Kanawha— for it
will not be safe for ua, I am tuld..tia touoh either
shore between the different form and trading posts
on oar_ route, this side of o'er destinatioty+the
Falls of the , ' •
••
"No, Indeed !" rejoiced . .her aunt, quickly
will•be ai mush as your lives are worth to•ceotere
a foot from the main current of the Ohitt-for
news reached us oaly•the other day, that niany
boats had been,atfatked this spring, and •tei,erel
lost with all on Wird." I •
"No one feels more concerned about the lan;
+essay id Miss, Bertrand than , myself , ' replied Eugene, lita deferential tone; kind since out or.
rival herr, I have left nothing undone this I
thought taiglit possibly add to her security ;and
comfort." ‘• - ,
"That is 'true, to my peri o nal knowledge,"
joined' In the 111)08 of Blanche; "end I 11 / 4 " 4
you, gr. Fairfax, in behalf of my fair .kininte
man. There will..perbaps," be pursued, •"" DO .
great danger, so long as you keep in the current;
but your watch moat not be neglected for a sloes
moment, either night or day ; and do not, I moat
solemnly sharp and warn you, under any circum
stances, or on Any pretence whatsoever, linger
yonnelval to be decoyed to either shore k"
• "I hope we noderstatid our duty better, Colonel,"
said One of the men, respectfully.
!I doubt it nut," replied the commander of the
Point; eI believe you are all faithful and trite
men,,or you would pot have been selected by - the
agent of Colonel Bertrani), for taking down pore
precious freight , than you ever carried berated but
the wisest and the best of men bate losttbair
litres by giving sir to the most earnest appeals of
humanity. You rudentend what I meant White.
men, apparently in the greatest distress, will bill
;your boat, represent themselves as having_pui
escaped from the Indians, and beg of yen, for the
love of (lad, in the most piteous tones, to noise to
tboir nileti but titre i deaf cer to thest—tO each.
! • ~ . ;
-. and all of tbetn4-even should you know the plead.
era to - be -of rine' 'own kin ; for- In such a case
your own brother might deceive yon—not wilfully
and voluntarily perhaps—hut •becanse of being
iroadeil en by the savages, themselves concealed.
• Yes, such things have been known! as one friend
being thus used to lure another to hi, destination . ;
and so•be emetics:6, vigilant, brave and true, and
may Om good Ood keep you from ill berm I"
As be finished speaking,-Bisoche proceeded to
take an affeetionate lines of all, receiving 'many
a' tender message for her -parents from these who
held them in lore and veneration ; and the boat
swung out, and began to Boat down with the lane
rent, now fairly entered upon the most dangerous
portion of a long and perilous journey. I '
The father of Bleuehe, Colonel Philip Bertrand,
was a native o: ,Virgiela, and a descendant of one
ll
of the'uguenot refugees, whii fled from their na
tive lied after! the revoestion of lb* 'edict MI
Mints in 1d65. : Ile bad been an Offieer
t iof some
note during thCßwrolution—a warm poll cal and
personal friend of the author of the Declaration
of Independence—and a gentleman. Who had al
weir stood high in the esteem of his .aMociates -
and , eotenitiorarles. , 1 • i
. • Though at one time a man of wealth, .Colimel
Beitnand bad lost much, and !suffered meth,
•
through Britishlovasion; aed while, shortly alter
thaelore of the:war, he bad met with a lbw more
settees. reverses, be had - been fain to accept a
, grant aft land, near .the felts of the Ohio, now
Louisville, tendered him by Virginia, whietrthee
held jurisdiction over the entire teflltory noweon.
• stiteducthe State of Kentucky.
,The grant bad decided the Colonel uplon seek.
• ing his new polisMisions and building up a new
both. in the then Far West, and ai hie wife had
insisted upon eirompanying blot on his first tour,
be bad assented!to her desire, on !condition. that
Blanches should be left amon g friends, till such
time al a place dould be prepared Which Might to
some degree be considered a fit abode foci one• so
- carefully and tenderly reared. ' • I. 1 •
' Blench. .would gladly hare gone with! her pa
re+ ; •but mil this point her father had ! been in
exorable—declaring-that she Would ha to mi.
main at the Elise till he should see Prope to send
fodder; and lista° was a man of positiv e , charsa
ter4 and a rigid dis,ciplloariae, the Matter bad
• heen settled without argument. ; I •
When Colonel! Bertrand removed to the West,
Eare,Fairfelx,l as we hate mai, accOmpanied
' hi- ; and coming of age shortly after, he had ie.°.
cep d the liberal offer of his nublelbenefactor, to
' route ha - with. hint in the capacity oil private seer.-
Mitt and 'confidential agent. , Oa [taking pones;
riot of his grin! , the Colonel had a lmost immedi
ate*, erected a birt, and offered smite inducements
' to Antlers as to Speedily rollers 'molted ,matter
quite
'a little comniunity—of which , . els a [matter of
course, be banquet the bead a; l 4 ichilf; and to
supply the wept' of his own fa ily and others,
andlinerease ; his gains in a legitiMath way, he
had opened a Wm, and filled it With goods from
the lEastern marts, which goods lifen ? . raneported
by bind liver - the motinliina to the K adawba, and
toes ee by water to the Falls of thel Ohio, whence
. their removal to • Fort, Baran& tie Cam
' e an easy
metier., To purchase and ship that...goods and
deqii er- package of letters.to friends In theEost,
Eugene had been . thrice dispatched—his third
cominierion also extending to the esicofting of the
beaetiful heiress, with ber servans,ltii - her new
horde. This lastetitatuission had Web so far elz •
ccuied at the time chosen for the opeidng of, our
story, as to bring the difftrent porde} to the mouth.
of the great Kanawha, whence mei reader has
• seen them slowly floating off upon Iti's still, glas
sy hosom of "the belie of rivere." I ' ,
ii
- 3i day, which was an auspieioos ono, phased
wit out anything oceurringovorthy td . note, 'until
neat fulur o'clock, when as Blanche elite standing'
Mathis - fore part of the:deck gazing let the lovely
scene which surrounded her; she salvia seemingly
flyidg body suddenly I leave. a linabi i 'of a gigantic
trod, (whose mighty branches exteeded far over
the'river, and near-whith the boat was then swayed
by, Ole action of the carnet), and alight with a
eraah upon the dock of the boat, dot more than
eight feet from her. One glance miSeed to show
beilerliat the:object was, and ;to freeze the blood
' in bet lreiroo The glowing eves cif a huge pan-.
-the( met her gaze. The suddennedi of the *bock
whiCh this discovery gave her/ was; Overpowering.
With a deafening shriek she fill upon her kneel
!amp Clasped her hands before-her s breast. The
I panther crouched for hie deadly lep;butore ho
spniing, the,hentitig knife of Buten Fairfax (who
~with the steersman, was the only p roost on deck
' bertdes Blanche), was buried to the hilt in his side,
.lafileting a severe but not fatal 'iround. The in-,
furruted beast at once turned upon Eugene, and a
'de ly struggle ensued:: Bet it we a short one.
Th polished blade of the knife played , bisek and
al
. for , ' like lightning Bashes, and at
.every plunge,
it Was buried to the hilt in thepanther's body,
Who soon fell io,the deck, dragging the dauntless
Eugene with him. • On seeing her protector fall,
.:Blanche uttered another shriek and rushed to his
aid but assistance from stouter': swam was et
linod. Tho boatmen gathered •ri•und,' and the
mirage 'monster was literally haclicl in _pieces
with their knives and hatchets,. and Eugene,
- reeked with blood, was dragged from under his
cardass. Supposing him to be dead or mortally
watindeil, Blettehe threw her - arms atoned his
neck and gave way to a passionate burst of grief.
'Bu il he was not dead—he was not area hurt, with,
thebxeeption
O f O few slight aerutehee. The blood
with which he int covered was the panther's, not
- his own; But 'Blanche's .embrace was his—is
''priceless treasure—an index of her heart's ewe.-
. Soon and affections.. If was-to 'oer his whole
future i life; as will be seen in the progress of oar
nor'.. .- i • . .
.
S owly,„andstlently, save the lc' . ciLional creek,
dip and plashiof the steerinnalekoar, the beat of
our i voyagers isle borne along upon Chabosou, of
the portent, od the third night of the voyage.—
T el hour was igiling late, and Eigene; the only
on laitirxcePt the watch. was siaddealj itartled,„
b . al +ugh hoed being'placed upon his shoulder,
accompanied 7 'the words, in the gruff voles of
the titan 0 i 1
" 1 s y, Cup k o,!herea trouble!" .1 r .
r
" i
at is it,-,Biek ?" inquired Eagles, starting
to his feet. , i • ' •
"Don't yon 'eti that's a heavy fog Awing, that'll,
sone It iver us Opise thick that we won't be able to
tell p white minifrom a nigger?" replied the bust.
mait- I Diek Winter by name—at tall,bone, source
lar, athletic spieimen of his class. .1
"(kohl •bearati ! so there isrq,exidaitnid- Ea.
gene, - looking 'off upon the already misty waters.
It Must have gathered very-siodilenly,l.for all was
cleat a luiontstifaiu. What is to be done now?—
This is Something I was not prepared; for, en such
a. nih h t, al thie?' c .
1
"rt looks traublous, Can't), I'll allow," returned
Died '
- "hut. we li ,rolofor't that's ssittin,and Is'pose
we'l hove to make the beat on't." i
• " at what is to be done ?— what do You advise?"
ask Zugine,' J lia a quick, exalted tone, that indi
mitt some degree of cirr us .. I .
" . hy„ of you anent so akeered shoat 'the young
lad4'atid it wern't so dead agin theordere .from
headmtarters, toy plan would he a erar and easy
ent+l'djust mit over to the Ksintuck shore, and
tie
ep.".
i
,aos... ~,t . 1i
- . rvely. d"tha ,
t will
o, no," said Eugene, 'positively ; ast wit,
never do, Dick--that will never di',! I would not
think of such is thing for a moment! We must
keep in the euireXtt by all means r • ; '
-"Ef you ean," rejoined the boe bop p"bet when
it Efts so dark As we- can't WI one thing from
l'oltier r it'll be powerful hard to do; had of we
don ° ,t, run agiol it,, bar on bank afore morning, in
spite ofrbe best Ip•ur, it'll be the luckiest go that
ever I had a hand 10. Ser, Cap'w--it's thickening
up fast ;" we san't see eyther hank at Oli, nor, the
• water nyther ; , the Wars IS pain' dim, end it looks
as if there war a ;loud all.roond,us." i
I see rl goer returned Eugene, exeitedly.—
"311rciful !kitten 1 I hope no accident; will befall
.us h ftire — eo d Set my heart almost minim; mei—
ter ibis, I !Tito* is the most dangerous part of
o g r - j our O e k—theNleinity where most of our boats.
hdre been espturild by the'saveges.. I .
Sluing this, Eugene hastened below where he
found the other bt.atmen sleeping so soundly as to
req4ire considerahle 'effort, on his pait, to wake
t h e w. At last, getting theta fairly roused, he Ili.
fuTgled them, .;most in a whisper, fur be did not
ca m to disturb ithp others, that a beasi , y fog "bad
- suddenly aria4M,Asnd he wished their p lomat on
ttfik, immedialett.- . \ .
..
. . .
fog, Carer exclaimed one, in a 'me which
indicated that he'rmtnpreheuded the pelli with the
Ira'
ri ' .' -
ugene; "there li 110,neCes-.
sityifor *raking the others, and hating la scene.— .
Up I and follow me; without a word !" 1
•ige glided b4eli to the dock, and wax/damn im
mediately joined ,Z, by' the boatmen, to I whom her
brielly made khakis his hopes and fears.
. They thouglit,flike their touipankat, that the
boat would be :target if made fast to aotoverheng
ineimb of the Kentucky shore; but frankly ad•
rattled that this Could not now , be dune without
ditittilty and daripr, and that there wee a pont
bill t of keepiblethe torrent. !-
••;, hen Triatul that possibility a certainty , and it'
shall be the bait night's work you ever performed!"
rejjloed Eugene ' ?.in a quick, excited tone.
•iWe'll do thebest we can, Ca n," was the re•
spotm; !Ant hoiman eats be eartin of the current
of this here crooked stream in a, foggy night."
4 long silence, followed—the' voyagite slowly
drilling down Al . rougb a misty darkness Omens
fralitle. to the' eye—when, soddenly, two loon*
commander, wh was standing nest.the - bow felt
thd extended branch of in overlitusging . lime at
lenity brush hisfitee. He Started, with an axe's..
mietion of alsruq . and •as -the same . raiment the
batman on the tight galled out: ' .1
. 4 4 9,0fek, bereii boys! we're agin ihe shore, as
ant at death !" 1 . I
Then followed a geese of hurried aid anxious
omifetion, the voices of the three boatmen ming...
-Hog together,in lend, quick, exalted toast. • '
- !Posh of the bow !"crud one. -
I"Qulckl altOpther, now! over irith .ber l'''.
shinned aeothed - • • . I -
--, "The deli'. its it! she's running aground here
out a muddy bottom l" almost yelled a:third.
i d t
• meditne th e laden beat was brushing along
a ' lost projeetliqr bilthse apilovetruebist litrio,
a every moment getting jaws and more eaten.
epd i libllti *FPS polo e l lad sweeps of the bolt.
•. . , . .
•;. _ .
1,
.
STEMA ,I PV NAN G s
NTIN OFFICE.
• g procured Itutoo lonno, vs of
now wound
foments .10111n4 ROOK Pllllrflita of Intel 48•410.
Ws at taw Ofato of Me lama' Jamas, straw taiga
It An bctitimi it say ether additional!' the roast/.
Abets, .tinniabits. mg, zowaw,
zdtvp elieniread 2Yabets.
Hanel Babe Afar latejn.
• Ankh, Jkli qf Apunamet„ ibaks,
/4# 1 4 8 9 . , Or*. Rats, re,
AI tbe very snorted sulks. Our stork el JOB TYPI le
more aatenalite then that oi . teap Wag oak In this tee.
Ws of Ms Stati, sod vs beep bands impkyed tut***
ft Jobbing. Rebut a praetkal Muter ourself, we will
guarantee our work to be as neat es aap that. an b.
terntel Nit In Mackie& mango IN COL9IIB dure
at . t.be aboetest moth*.
•
Iloollur bassi Is every vati•ty sr siyho. Whisk Weeks
of .t deserislos sissulbetursil, boned sad valid to
onlo at obistest wiles
NO. 20.
men, as they attempted to posh her oF, efts.
plunged, without touching bottom, Into what ap.
pared to be a soft, clayey an bee which they
wire only entricated by suclFt evilly et atesegth
as tended still more to draw rmft ala cra upon
the. bank they wished to avoid. At length,
scarcely more than a minute from the first alarm.'
there was kind of settling together, ea it mimos a
the boat became fast and immovable.
the faerwu announced by Dirk Winter, in his
characteristic manner—Who added, with at snob,
that lit was just what he expected. For a mo
ment or two a dead silence followed, as If each
comprehended that the matter was one to be
viewed'la a very serious light.
"111 get over the bow; and try to flit the lay of
the ** L od with my loot,". laid Tom Walvis; and
forthwith be set about the not very pleasauthre.
&triable*. - •
At this moment game beard his name pro
nounced by a voice that seldom failed to incite a
peculiar emotion in his breast, ' and now nee le
mange thrill throigh every nerve I and hasten•
log below, be found Blench% folly dressed, with
alight'in her band, needing Joel outside of her •
cabin, in the regular passage which led length.
wise through the centre of behest.
"I bare hoard something, Begins," she said,.
"enough to know that wi have met with an, aced:
dont, bat not enflicient to tally compreheat its
nature."
"llnfortunately, slant two boors ago," replied
Eugene, "we suddenly became Involved to a dense
fog; and in spite of our every precaution and
cars, we have run aground—it may be against the
Ohio shore—it may be against ea termed—lt is so
dark we can't tell. But be not alarmed, Bliss
Blanche." be hurriedly added r "I trust we shall
soon be afloat again; a though in any event, ihe,
darkness is sodloient to cootie! as from the aawa;.
gee, even were they in the vicinity."
"I know little cf Intilane," returned Blanche;
"but I have elways onierstaad that they are
somewhat remarkable for their acuteness of bear'
lain' and if such is the nee, there would be no •
necessity of their being very near, to be midi
acquainted with oar locality, judging fraim UV"
loud voices I beard a law . ininutea ago."
"I fear we've been rather imprudent," said Eat
in a deprecating tone; "bat in the excite.
moot—"
• Ilia words were suddenly cut abort by several
loud voles* of alarm froze without, followed by
quick and heavy trampling scram the deck; and
the next moment Seth Harper Diok Winter ®
bunt Into the passage, the former exclaiming s
"We've ran pleat Into s red nigger's nest, Cap's,
and Tom Harris is already butchered and scalped!"
And even as be spoke, as If in confirmation of
hie dreadful intelligence, there arose a eerie* of
wild, piercing, demoniac al yells, followed by a dead
and ominous. silence.
So far we have followed the loftily heroine end
her friends in this adventure; bat the bingeing
is all that we can publish in • our columns. The
"balance of the narrative can only be found 10 the
New York Ledger , the grist family paper, which
can be obtained at all the periodical stoat when
papers aro sold. Remember to ask for the
"Ledger," dated May 22nd, end In it you, will get
the continuation of the 'narrative from where it
leaves off here. If there are no-,book.stores or
news-takes convenient to where you. rialde, the
publisher of the Ledger irill send you a copy ,by'
mail, if ypu will send - him eve cents in a letter.—
Alin's, Robert Bonner, Ledger Office, 44 Ann
street, New York. This story Is entitled, "Perils
of the Border," and grows more and more inter.
'sting as it goes. on.
jnisallan.
tics. Cummins's EIPIICCIL—Just before the vote was li
ken on the Kansas bill, In the &nate of the United
States, Ural. Groton arose to addrees the , Senate, earl
nude a few brief remarks reminding Senator Bigler that
he misrepresented his comotsents tir voting for the but
reported by the Committee of Conference :
Senator Cameron mid: lialbm tho 'rot* is taken I de.
sire to say a word or two In relation to my own course.
'lt was my Intention sto.on earl.* part of the session to
my somst bin; upon Um general anWect of Kansas affairs,
but I am, as you all know, not 'ninth of a public epos k
er, having but little aoiscity la that any, and no toots
for It. I often felt disposed to take part In the debate •
but when I:propased to do so, I deferred to irtbers;
sometimes when I felt like going on, I found that some
gentleman wag discussing the question bolter than I
could hope to do. L rise at this time only to my that I
disapprove of the proposition now before the donate,
much mom than I did of the original sitlempt to Awe
on the mph, of . Kansas a constitution whku they, wen unwilling to take. ' The original bill MU • plata peopco
'Mon, Bur which mon.usight have voted honestly, with •
out antilmistut their motives to censure. This 1 look
Amon so a allirrent strait. This to my mind, is a trkk
to impose upon weak men, or to @natle corrupt men to
make the Impression upon their constituents at home
that they hare been acting honestly. Stilla should
have said nothing on this subjvet now, If my reverie%
.colleague had not Neu In snob hot haste to announce
to the Senator from New York, while he was disrusing
the propodtloo, that the vote hid been carried la the
other Uouse against the wishes of the freemen of Kan.
'me. His set was so different front what I espeekd from
tut honorable Senator from Pennsylvania. that I weans , ,
prised it It. I have always heretofore. undeistood that
roe mate in the whole Stan, of Pennsylvania was more
positive and decided in the expression of his belief be- •
butple tha Kansas would Dot only • fler7,
Arts, that slie s hoo ld not have a State oonsfltut km
at all, unless It should to voted ibr by a majority of her
citizens. His whole course lu 114 r. until he cups here: .
was In favor of foremen and of the Fri. Labor of the
Northern Stake. Hlaown history was such as nettled.
it to make him an advocate of freomen and tree labor.
Why babas changed his course hero is no buMwsse of
mins but It does seem V) toe In bad 'taste that be should
act as be doeo,.knowlog, as b. certainly does. that net
only the whole Opposition party In Peonsylvanks, bat a
very large Majority of lb* party to which he beking•in
that Staten are opposed to this measure, and opposed to
the conduct of the i'lesldent of the United States in re
tard to it and I cannot permit him to come here and
make the impression that be believes the p °pieta Penn
- !ghosts are in favor of It; nor can I remain quiet,
marts as I dislike to talk la petite, when the impression
Is attempted to le made that the people of Pennsylvania
are with him mutat the President of the rolted States
upon this subject. If the vote were to be taken toetor-
Toe, the people of Pennsylvania, be a hundred thou
sand majority, would decide that the Pies/dent of the
United States bad deceived them in regard to this mat- I
t i ,e, and would prove also that my colleague la along
'wonting bas constituents on this great question.
The petrol* of Pennsylvania are coostrvative, and on
all oneetioc • connected with slavery they have alersys
taken a moderate coarse; bat, sir, I toll you that if any
man, who was In their ombdence in the year 11146 could_
bare convinced them that. by any possible Wiener. a
CeostitiatiO• could he toreedonpon the people of Naomi
In opposition 16 their a biles, and without a vole of the
people, Mr. Ihiebanes could' never have received the
electoral vote of Peons) , tennis. Ile owes It to the Mu
!duet of himself, and the active InflUellee of his Mends
all over the Slate, asoirUng that by nature Kansas most '
be free. and that no man would dare, no matter what •
his position was, to attempt to put open bora
tine unless her people bad the Des and full right to vote
for or against it. no President himself, thought soon*
ill lately. Everybody knows that so late as the 7th of
July last, he wrote a letter to a distinguished man In
Kansas, telling him that the occultation Must be sib
mined to the people of the Territory Saw their fair and
free vote. or Wwould not be adopted or sanctioned by
the Oovernment.
N
that I do not desire to occupy e n
MIN of lik;
Senate now. lam desirous Mat the vote stmil betaken.
4 majority by some means or other, has dedded spinal
win the other boom; the ausiorlily ben, we how- 12
Italian us, and It le Idle to talk when a senors' mak. rity
will vote against us.
ExeLonen.—The Phils*lphie Acudiffiy of
Music as an operatic establishment. It closed
on Saturday evening week ; with the, rent many
thousands of dcllitrs beitindband— the news-
papers not paid for advertising—the princi
pal and secondary . 'vocalist's, the chorus, the --
orchestra, the door-keepers, and it'll the am-.
ployees, about the establishment, clatitoring 1
for their salaries. For several nights during
the late season, it was with difficulty that the
artists could be induced to go on with their
Work. In'the 'midst of all this, Mr.. Marshall
*as blaming Mr. Maretsek, Mr. Maietsek was
retorting upon Marshall, the Directors were
altqrnately dolvn upon kith, and the poor, •
.suffering singers and instrtunentalists were
pitching into the whole -- concern, lessee,
agent, and aU. The principal difficulty has
.been, that the prices were too bids.
million were excluded, Aline the upper ten
thousand, or white kid glove gentry, could
or would act support the opera. If this er
ror is reformed in the retie% the Academy
will pay the Directors. If not,• cobwebs will
gathei on its magnificent' chandelier, and the
house will be closed - Mr. Mar
shall, tbe lessee, was unfit tor the business, •
tut he was compelled to employ, yaretxek to
manage it for him.
TIII WORE AT sae CAPITOL Boturtios,
Washinpoo), has been suspended for want of,
appropnation. Haring got rid of Ksiisasi
Congress can now turn their attention lb the
raising of means to keep the goiernment in
fundit.--Phila. Ledger.
Not too flat, if you please. Conieess may
have got rid of Kansas; but the Administra
tion will haw its bends full, .if it thinks to
force the detested English bill on the Amer'.
can people. That the people of Kansas will •
spurn
,it; we are Sure. it is very easy to, .
miss the Kansas business with a wan of As.
band; but like the 'gory Duncan it will INse
again to blast the tyrant who: would asses*
nate ' Freedom., Let the Governnient raise
money. It needs it. But vain the lisps to
get rid of,Kansas. .
Tim' pre . teestpeata Willem* a satita is Re&
Ili. The emancipation Lei don het este.
BOOK BINDERt.