The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, July 24, 1858, Image 1

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    • Omni Sossaisnlcur; • •, i•
' TWO , DOLLAILS pre anstitte, payable In ilann
el 25 it nnt paid witbliitt enaut.tui—and 1PA,60
ilu . t pail within tho year. •
. .
Three copies to one addressAin advert.%) ' ' '
!Soren do -. do '. ' I°' ' . - :10 '
Fifteen dodo - . - on • , '- : bp .
Club subscriptions Moist be lorsrLably paid lo .• •
'orme, and sent to *co addriii. l,l
'TO i.LIFIIdkO um crsizzos: .. i .. ;.1;
t The JOURNAL will be forntisheid to Contenand of
at $ per likroplei,eaph on. drOvery: • "i 1
... graerestent 404 SeANot lbarkeresapplledisilbl!
Sot:asst. at tit intiGrance. --.- , . , ' ;
t t f
•
-21( a LAW Or ) &wir.srral. pew
II t %oboes r the diseontinuance of their w •
no,
Pats' lbs Pit ki
nt[testycontinue to send them on 1
all n rm.:ill - ages aro pill: ' ; .. : 1 !
. ~i t Solos-Abase neglect or refinte to take their nrcoP •
perA fmus the ()Meer., *blob they are directed. they o.
held responsible uslill they have settled the bilis'au
ent..r.tthreli Martina naafi.- ' -
It a uhemlbc- , ntill'e to rehi
..,r au ha..ri bora unite. ...ger place! wllhont Informal&
the pohlialser, and the niorapapereare seut to the
m d id wtt
direction, ihey are held mope:liable: . , :
The u. hove decided I hat refusing
per. from the °Mee. or removing, and too , ' a
called ter, la prima facia evidence of I nteti
RATES OF ADVERTISING."
One Pplitrlipf 10 lines, fel cents for one; nsertion—an
' request Insertions42s rents each. 3.lines one time,"
rents—subknitent Insertions, 121.4 rents each. All a
) vertisetneuts over 3 lines, for short periods; charged'as
square. It
•r MONTHS. O.fa, TWO. TRIUZ. : •
rirUX •
Thre.•linen, bi- $1 25 . 4,1 23 ca,o.
, - ' (-25 175 ; 75, - y, 0.
Vito lints, lod 1 50. Si 00 . 300 60:
Six 11110., .I' 5 225 200 400 '6 1,
um., 125_ 245 270 .4 50 71.,
Eight line., • 1 25' 2 285 500 , $
• ro . p. lines, 12. s :3 oo 550. „b.,
-.Loves raw IJNSA Cut ASA sons= or TAN Una. •
One oti Otte. 2 . 51 223 '5 00 1• 600 10 I
Two s i eeeery 2'261 ,4 00 00 - 900 14i '
'Three sonavek 330 600 . 60 12 00 ,
Four "Inane, 4 60'1 •6 00 800 14 00 .20
ti w i r ter eel, nd 1 900 ' 12 00 18 00 '5O. I.
reerspnee for short periode,Ml per:lc:rem:lent;
4r3' lueiness .Hires, 61 each—accompanied * with,' ,
advertisement, 50 rake
• • I;1
• advertisements before Marrlagestatid Veaths, 10 cab
. per line for first lusertien—subsequen I insertlous,s molt
per linty sine wordsare,countedasa lino inadvertising .
:Merchants and others; advertising by the year, lett
changes. and a standing advertisement not exceeding' 1
I Ines, will be charged,lsettliting subscription, ' 16
Spec.. b. the amount Mimi, squares, with
,z than
eA and subscription. • ' 20:00
Without ehanges, atthe rates designaled above.
Advertisements set in larger type than nspal will; be
eh, , ,rzed 50 per Cent:advance. on there prices. All cut
will be charged the.aame as letter press.
N., Trade advertisements ;received from Advertising
ze s bro,,,t, except at 251,5 r rent. advance on there
p rfr...,.nnless by /medal Aga Lament with the publisher,'
irrligos 25 rents each. treatbs acannpanicd with ico.
(ice.. 2.; rents, Without notices, no, charge." , '
Alt notices, except those of a religious character and
fe educational purpot‘, will be charged 25 cents (many
numlor of lines under 10. Over 10 linos, tcentsperlfue
additional. " - .
Proceedings of meetings not era general or public chair- .
serer, charged, at 4 cents per line for each Insertion.
To facilitate caleulatinns.wo will state 'that 324' liqes
make a column-Ir4 lines a half colnnto--and 82 lines a '
lieArter column. 2.92 words make a collll2lo-1476 shelf
volume--and,73 a quarter column. All'otki lines over,
each square, c ged at t the rate of 4 cents' per line„for
one time. and .9 per line for three times.
Yearly adveitiperi must confine their adVertislng ,
their own business. Agencies for others, sale. of Meal
Estate. e re not Included In business advertisements.
IRON WORKS.
TAMAQUA IRON WORKS.
Carter,& Alien s
Iron Thunders, 3lnclAinists. lloihn• owl Nacioraists' Tool
Makers end air Hu r ibtris.
The subserlheis are 'now prepared to g r.. '
ce m v., omen for all kinds of Stationary .
Engines and machinery fur collieries, TR WR.
hl..t. furnaces. mills: &e. Extentdre rd. 4 r . :•, - , lc i az
ci lilies and praetiral experience:ln the ica,
business. warrant them In taking the largest COLIinICIS
nt the lowest prices.
I.sra 'radar alteration la called to wens & Allen's Ne7f,
:if) le Patent Winding 3lnchlnery, by which the Slopes
z.:11,.ff rope or Oaths run the top of both drum in
ways.
This a t raneoment, it iso
roses
believed. will say").
In t wear .111 teseof ro ses Or chains, the price of the
Machinery In fire years; and for fast winding.sitnpileitl
of rianstrucl ion and dura bility, It cannot be surpasselL
.lVe also recommend the new cur wheel, invented by 31r,
Lurien IL Allen. This whea' ran only be had pt our.
narks. and hm+ stood the lost of the'several severe win;
ter% past. triumphantly': hint 7 i single wheel having been
iniken since its introductiorl., we are new placing It
lumbar the ears of some of rho principal Railroad Compal
mess In the conntry.
"Me wriuld also rail the attention of the public to Mil .
Tamaqua Car Slatap,ronnerted alt the above works and
r, , eolly..ereaed for the manure eof ltaltroad.Dritt4
Ft-richt Cara and Truck...and f rat ed I th. all . the 114,
trkt improvements, so that. they are thus enabled to elt!,
eintrytark Lunch cheaper and with more despatch than
All Arai& guaranteed. • Persons wanting anything
our UM. ( would do well to give us a can.
CARTER & ALLES.:II
MEE
FOUNDRY . 111. MACkilfir. SHOP, ;1r
..fortCar bon, Seamy /Kll.l Pa.
. /1. WINTER:S'II:EN unnoune 7
es his readlner, from the complete outfit 771
of the above urnedestabllshment:tosupl
• et dia . ' ply orders his lino of husines•—l , ,,
• __ such as for titeatit' Engines,ltallroad and
D r ill 1 - . 3 ,, pump., coal hrtakere, eastinge :id 51 arhInti.,
ry I ,v iry pattern. , Ile wherants his work to give eatiO ,
Lr rton.:ihd accordingly solicits patronatte at home andl ,
abroad. , ' Jeri. 27. iSb7 4-I s lli
_
FOUNDRY AND MACHINF SHOP; 1! 1
Steam Car eractoryvare. ',O!
mem NOTICE —The laisluesscf ihe late SIMI.,
I, lti l
r i: • ~,, of SNYDER & MILNES, tllll be control ,
fr,„ . ' - ' ued -by the inthircriber in all Its Tarlotnt '
icovloam:hem of Steam linglooltulldlng. I roe . '
Founder, manufacturer eh all kinds at!,
13 , binery, for Rolling 3 . 11115, Blast Furnices, Railroad 1
'm i .. kr., &e. Ile will also continue the business of 3I ha' 1 1
~; Alla Selling the relebnitelfrini Fermi While .Ash and !,
~,,,,ad Rpohn Vcins licd•Ash Owls. being sole prnprbin , i
or el . these e!nilieries. , G EOROB M. SNYDEiI. ~!
January 21,18:,7 _
.. A.4r, - ;1
POTTSVILLF. ROLLING MILL. .:1 , 1
gBLIISCH.IIII:ItS aro
' mak Manny mantifitetruing vsitinua 141.011
••••• CoWarm' Hallo. boighlug `..."2,.2.5.2b. 30.32
and 40 pounds per yard. Alpo,
Rails of the moat approved 'patterns,k
g tong 45,51 t, 5a and 40 pounds per yard. From thol
perlence of the past five
„Team we feel confident ofl
.king Italia unsurpassed in quality by any tail! in MO
, unlry. All buolnegs communication?, addreved tp ?
,srg. l'AnmEr k Stir, Iron Factors, Pottsville. will,'
',et with. promp.t Attention. JNO. & CO. I'l
Jana 20, , s 7 ; V
PALO ALTO' ROLLING MILL.
..clri momo , TILE Suliscribors beg !curt to on
flounce to thetr . friends and the public;,
:4, 4 „ generally.,that their new Rolling Mill at,
Palo Alto J& n6w complete, and in full'
operation, and thnt they are prepared tol
-nish T rails of vartnnVpatterns. welabangfrorn 2201
tb , per y 31.41. AI sn, dllTorentalses of fiat j aquare andl
cut nn•rehants• bar Iron.
• • •
* , l••rq P.r rails or bar iron are respectfully solicited,
I w ill inert with prorript, attention If left either at
t.• Itollhez 31111. Bright Lerch's Hardware Store,
,creel. or at their °Dice, N. V. Corner of Centre
Nl:irkot streets, 2tl story. 'HAYWOOD, LEE & CO.
.Iwe 1. ' 1-tf
_
TO COAL OPERATORS & MINERS..
Pioneer Boller Work*. i
i"rrlres ,- ww The subscriber respectfully Invite the.
Isl attention of the businesSeommutilty to I,
his Boller Works,on Railroad sfreet.be-:
low the Passenger Depot, Pottsville, Pa., '
where he Is prepared to manufwetare
itol I,Ells 4 it' EVERY DRSCR/PTION. •
kr- ~..., t 3, 1 / 4 .. Air Stacks. Blast Pipes, Gasometers. Drift
s. ,t,... dr. 71 ,, ilers on hand. ''
I , 111.; a pra,l ica I mechanic and havlngfor years devoted
, :441" entirety to thi, Imanch of limo business, he flat
hinit'olf that work done at his establl'AMent will : I
- sat tqfied i'm to all who may-favor -him with a call.—
I ,v idua Is and .Coto panics w ill tind It greatly to their ad- I i
r,t r.r,r, to o X:1111111fo his work heftire engaging elaewhere.
Syr. 21. 'Si 47-If) - - J 011:: T. NOBLE. !I1
EAVER MEADOW IRON WORKS.
• iiebb.lN a Illttl'llElC, Iron and Brass ID
) Nine Fouuslere, respectfully inform their pa- ij
trine and the piddle genentily,that they
Ifirtcnzmc am fully prepared at the above estaldwi.
cuent. to manufacture Steam Engines (if ji
ry Pumps. Railroad and Drift Cars, and every ''s!
de.eriptb ! tt of Iron and. Riess 'Castings suitable for 4 1)
• C.. 11 minim., or other busiuess,on the most reasonable I
ms, _Paso, Mowing Cylinders (ugliest Furnaces and 'A
lone Work to general.
:en Mint: rif all kindedone with neatness and despatch
tlyo bese.t prices. All work furtilsbud by thisirlrer•
••-1 to perform licit. They "mild sollett tl atom of t
•• who may inn thbrielnlty. ! •
~, niers '
laving s ub m itted ui it, wit hin explanation of its coat-
I tuffs .to•-a number of PhySichinp of Philadelphia,
ong whom were the late Drs. Jonvi.h lin rtshorne and
. (. Morton, it 11111 1 1 received their entire approval, and
a ny of the Medical Faculty are now not only prescrib.
t• It for their patients. but are noting It- themselvee,
. amally, and in their - families. As a toile It is one-'
1 • ailed. and Its pmperties are of pi) Invigorating a na
me now fully i i t, re, that it is given with p4I feet safety and suceess to
...ra to furnish. at the Ashland ken l'i most lender Intro*. . .
- W o rk.. Steam Eng):les and I'unipsol any I.t be' Eu ma" is very gradual, but rertalr. In Its action I
, it films power and rapacity, for Mining and other , in • in the organs of digestion, the Increased Recrellona of ,
purituatta. Coal lireakrrsod every sixennd !f it liver, pancreas and mucous membrane of the ph ) . i
,-,.. now in use, together with mimings and forging, ; ;tfa. eb, and requires that only one dose be taken inbren
cory descriptions. Coal and. Drift Cali,, of all - sixes : four hours: for confirmed Dyspeney ran only be cured
gradually restoring the organs of digestion to a heal-1
t• a t,tens. large Truck and II ono, Cars.—all furnished ':i b
great, tueress met with in Curing the I
;••••le;rtest • notice. The suborribers flat ter thetn-..,;t1 y l•faie• • The
I•• that. inasmuch as every member of the firm Is a ll .st aggravated rase ot Dspi•psy, accompanied some.,
Al nes with& high grade of hypshondriasis, has estab-1
l'i-,1 niechanie. they will he able to furnish m mid.
unbounded . rmildenre In the curative
1. th,tlw 111 compare favorably with any in the Re- !lii h'4•tke imat
imrtles ur I tin •'Euxm; ' in corroboration of which i
I All ordern directed to L. P. OARS ER & itnns.. Mtn :IP •
Sltal,lk II; county, Pa , will receive prompt atten- !Ir. d the following teatime' lain:
1, •ii ! ATTESTATION.—We. having used Willianis'a "Anti-
I • bIIC/INEL GARNER,' dn....peptic Elixir," with the most perfect sat lafaction and.,
cress, take great pleasure In recommending It to all'
' ! '.l. •
.1,,,,,.4.
'day
lc,.
, 57
JOSEPH OMIN I t it • 1 mon, suffering with llyapepsy as we•nre fully eoa. . ,
;iv red of its most esaftpable qualitlea In restoring the
;11 . est Ire powers,Vovi
emng all pains and uneasiness,and
nifuereville-
OEiiA Ygti'S IRON WORKS - 11,1 petting a healthy tone hi :q
the,ounielt :
•
, .
- II , elm It. Penrose. 34,South Wharves; Casper Morris,l
sass Tilt: Subscriber Is prepared to mann
, . #ll, facture STEAM ENGINES-of any power,
li
.. i Puinpsof any capacity,and Coal Dreakrrs +
IT cc.:l;;TAbner Elutes, Market street a bore - Sian. • Ed-'
, re 'rd IL Rowley, N 0.14 North Wharves; Michael D unn,'
. 'ni f of every description ;as wet
as every I S perintendent Merchants' Exchange: 11 intuit Stiles,
. — .7.. '..... other kind of 'bl ue r tnay used it„Mines, P ukford hoed; Hannah. Webb, "211 Filbert street; ll.'
• • ,, :1'....,0 es. gelling .Mills. wMills. Ar.-
: N SPerry. 12 • Edward , street; Lawrence Newbold, No.l
, tlie fo !Mies 'possessed for manufacturing. and . t c hestnut street, - .Phlladelphia; Wm. Yard, 0 City I
''.,..: •x p..,. knee In the busineas.work'ean he t urned ' it( : Rudolph L'Arni:2bl Broadway; 11. N. Winans,'
.., thi , '... , tabikliment, at' the very lowest prices' f and 94 Pater at reet,•New York. .. ,
•.;;•••I‘ r q ttlity. . I; he list of names could he a ttended to almost any
i,..i, ,t, nrputting up machlneryey any kind, le th, but the foregoing In deemed sufficient. • '
- '
~ , ,,1 t.,, 4 . .111 41111 4 . Y.11111/tlll patterns and !veer...ear.- '
e lisetong of 11. A': ATER"( 7", who was abandoned asi
~ . .1 .11)11111,1, 1 /.:14r1/ eblitratlipg elsewhere. i•
-
r" .t ~, r, Mod are snlielled, and strict attention larernsble. and given up In Die.
1N... tel le. Ir pi wept
.executlon. , t R. J. WILLIARS—Lk4C SICI—For fifteen, 'yearn - pre- ,
..'.!
WI LLIAM DEll AVEN. vi vt^ 1854 ' i " l iercil '''' much f roth l/ PPTIY , that / •
- - --
, 113 „ tf .. ht, fee Completely prnstrafed, both in mind and body,.
sin at length became So weakened I could not attend toj
, in busincalnd was slaking into a decline. end It was,
1d eyed I never could recover; the best Radical aid was;
pro urell for me , and (ivory' means resorted to without ;
in reliet till I ' lm advised to use your "ElLalr," and
len • the time I began taking it I gradually Improved ;
Lit wall completely restored - to health: The dreadful '•
tu Angs, I endured frogr Dispapky If cannot describe;''
at lam confottntithat without lhe afteryour .EIIIIO ;
I x mild Ite iladwY grave. I assert that t - i solemnly be-I your '•Eli x ir" has saved me (rem an early dead h.— •
I'e at I inne now in the enjoyment of Most. excellent
te. th. • , 11. N. SPERRY..
I J
is, id.h,lR.S7. ! No. 1104 N. 411n1 ii.Phlllad'a.l
. 1 1., the undersigned. have known Mr. If. N; Sperry l'
or 'veral years, and take pleasure in stating that his,.
i rtien can la perfectly_ relied on. end that we our. i
41 know that he halo been wnderfully restored to!
li ‘th from the brink fitthe gra v e ; and we believe, as !
le rte, solely by the usinf Dr. Williams'a , •Elialr.” ,
p Thos. 3,CH:of:amt. No. 143 Phcentx at.
• Joux }inert, Race st., above Second.
t . Penally appeared before me, (nne of the Alderman
4 t • e city of Philadelphia,) IL N. SPERRT. who being'
lid affirmed. cloth depose and my. that the tents set'
art in the above cortitleate ant true in every particular.l
.15 orn'aud subscribed this. 6th day of June. t 5.57. -
, FREDERICK Raa,:A/cieratene.
,TI "Elixir" [Druid in tbot Iles. at $1 each, or A bottled/
.r . Proprietocr-JAMES WILLIAMS. M. 11, .
, • Chent(sfaml J'Aareeneruitat.
' No. 4 South Seventh street, Philadelphia.
I . For ale-by JouinG. Brows, Centre street, t'otts.l
Bitll xly ' -
. ..... :1
~
MEM
9.15',7
•
IiyASHINOTOK (RQ_N WORKS.
uttaville,a.
JAS WREN respectfully intite
1 4ckteritieri of the hueittet , e community
N..a. Machine Shopand Foundry
nt` , , , rem..,ll,tue en Coal s!ndltallrondatreets, Rr
•.-"Mt•••••._,lnct fronting"on Norwegian street, where I b i
p-roired eNecitte. all ordera for machinery of
/No, wit a. steatn Enginert.all kinds of Gear. t
11.
r u .tlrist and Saw dlills, Single and ;I.
Paul; Co.rl ]maker*. lem t Cara, k hide- h,
I fastiozmt .uch as Chairife Flat and T Lail;
dc.; kinds of cast and wrought iron I
4,44 : nra , tical meranica.ad haTin made !, e n
,- 1 t 0i , 14 of the Coal Regio b o their' n study for g
years,
ooi r Machinery In their Unroof lividness. they ;t
that work done at their establishment '
In all who may bouor them will, •
ihankfullv received and prompflyexe•
nl ream - m.lth, terms.
ilt.t.B WREN:JAMES witEN.
.
. 474 r , of
.
TRE,mo NT Moak WORIO. . . f Ji
ti
rola:at; etch nylki untatit r, rennet. :. I .1
_ri,....s . The Subrerllterrreapeetfully invite 1,....;
the attention of the bualnaanetiannunlty !. 7
1:1p 71— "'" to their New Illnehlne Flinp and Fouu-1 fol
= dry,Sreeted In the toan of Tremont. and I II
... • untlar the.auperintendena and hinnage. II
r
- ,1 •, ,, r.: V.. ltatdorlt and Philip Unthnit}..where • 1,
ntpuad !tie:serrate all order's l'or.3lnrldnery of vii
''ttnd In.n. NtirlC 11A Ktaam Engine, of any pnwrr; - I
~,o- ...,,,,ily. Cott] Ilrenkaranf arery &rants- ii
,! kind,. of liwirlov for Roping .Nlllla. (trial and . - 7a
' , A., WM Car.. and all kfn.l..r,f %CIF, ad Cant In as.
.1
: 11,1 1rn.f.:31r Flat and T Rails, l'.otrk SliftchoP.ood,.]
1 , or Ca..t and Wmusht Irolitiltaflltige. Mr. Unt.-
''' int! A nrart l , a l Merbanle.and havlnr had them*.
• Ind wt . periance for ninny yearn In the Coal Reston, ea
. 4 .4drout, of' Putting up IlschlnerF of awy' hind. I f ,
It ad tn tall and axamtneent patterns and superior Cu
4..,f work. and bae nme s ittaOulnted with prlrenst 14
t'. a• before rontrsating elsewhere. Ordrronf or- Sr
11, nkftilly received, and "trial attention wlllbe 'hi
tn their. prompt ateetalln_ ,0 batwing' several 11.,20,
and 60 horse Zegines oil hunt •
.1,185? 1-1 y
C, A. A A. M. SELTZER.
•
JOURNAL.
VOL.
;', INAL
r • ,
1 cats:. lika#6, -
. Wholesale and:lit:tan '
rftnui.giamit easiti Cllaosaa.last.
8.8. corner Centre and Norwegian Bts.,
(Opp - write it - ortitner'e Hotel,),
POTTSVILLE,
.P.BG BISAS
MANUFACTURER AND. SOLE PROPRIETOR OP
• Epttssigts !Pectoral Dlfacture. - - •
•
EPTING'S PECTORAL MIXTURE cures Coughs.'
EPPING'S - PECTORAL MIXTURE cams
EPPING'S Pk.cToitAL MIXTURE cures Breachlns.. •
EPTING'S PECTORAL 11LXTUR ' E cures &we Throats.
EpTINWS PECTORAL MIXTURE will relieve consuntp
. tire patients In' advinced stages of the 'disease.
EPPING'S PECTORAL MIXTURE sold byJAcoe L. Sun
mix, Ashland.
EPPING'S PECTORAL MIXIIIRE sold by 3. Haws
EPT/NOl3 PLVTOEAL MIXTURE sold by*m.E. Evan,
Schuylkill Haven.` -
. ,
EPPING'A PECTORAL MIXTURE sold Ry all druggists
'geniusliy I broughout the county. .
Ootober, 24,'51 1, • • ,
HOWARD ?ABBOOIATIOIII, •
Philadelphia.
A benevolent Ingtfirdion, egiabiiVAM by special ittelossateld
for the refl. , / of Ihe, sitk and digitated;
with litnieni end Epidemic_ diseases.
11E HOWARD
,ASSOCIATI
ON;;
in viewof the: awful destruetkm. of human DAN
eaused.bySexual diseases. and the deceptions practiced
upon theonfortunais victimsof such diseases byMuacka,
several years ago dheeted their Consulting Surgeon-as
a PIARITA BLE ACT worthy of their name, to open a
Dispensary for the treatment of this class of disease;
In all their forms, and to Ciro 3IEDICAL ADVICE ORA
TIS, to all who apply by. letter, with a description of
t heir condition, (age, peenpation, bald tit °Ellie. &e.,) and
in bases of extreme poverty, to FURNISH MEDICINES
FERE OF CHARGE, It Is needless to add' that the At
iodation eommandathe highest Medical skill Of theage,
and will furnish the most approved ,modern treatment.
The Directors, on , 1 11 review of, the past, feel enured
that their labors In this sphere of benevolent effort, hate
been of great benefit to the &filleted. especially to' the
young, and they have resolved to devote themselves,
with renewed seal, to this very Important but much des
pised muse.
dual Published by the Association. a Report on Rpm ,
matorrhcon, or Seminal Weakness. andvd her Diseases of
the s%exual °mum. by tbe Consulting Burgeon.which
mill be won t by mail, On a. rested 'envelope.) FREE OF
CHARGE, on receipt of 1 4 11'0 STAMPS for postage.
Address. for Report or treatment, Dr. 0110110 E It.
CALHOUN, Consul Ong Surgeon, Lionised Association,
N 0.3 South Ninth street, Philadelphia. Pa.
Ity order of the Dliectors. ./MILA D.IIEARTWELI.
Fstecinp,Secrelin7. /*resident.
Oet."3, .
40-1 y
OftEAT fIEiLITTMER,
So Long Uosnecessfully Sopght,
FOUND AT SLAST!, ,
•
0. IT RESTORES PEItIIANENTLY OR 4Y HAIR
to lid original color: covers lusuilantly the bald
bead: removes all.dandrulT, Rating _and all scrofula,
scald he lid and all erupt lorm; . makes the bale , soft, heal.
thy, and glossy; and will preserve It to toy Imaginable
age, removes, as if by magic, all blotches. &c., from the
fare, rod cures all neuralgia and nervous headache. $OO
circular and,the following:
• ' DOver, NAL, Feb..2d.165 . 7.
PROF. 0. J. WOOD: & CO.--bents:• Wi thin a few day'
have received no many orders and calls for Pmt. 0. J.
500,p.., tint'. Restorative, that to-day we were compelled
o send to Bost oti for a quantity, (the 6 dozed you tbr
arded all being, sold.) whUe we might order a quantity
rem you. Etwre bottle we hare sold seems 1 , 1 here pro
, weed thriv or four new customers, and the approbation
• i'd patronage It receives from the most =Antenna' an.
orthy citizens of our vicinity, fatly convince us that
t Is a MOST VALUABLE PREPARATION.
,Send uz, is goon an maybe, one gross of St size; and
ne dozen S 2 size: and I...elfsve ns;yeurs, very respect
ully, [Signed] I . ...DANIEL ;LATHROP & CO.
- •
• II ickory'Clmre, Sit. Charles Co.. to., Nov. 1,-l& '
i t
' PROP. 0. J.- WOOD,— r Sir: Some time last summer
e Were Induced to n j,, 'me of your [lair Restorathre,
nd its effects were on tg' derful k we feel it our-duty to
ou and ll* afflicted', to rt it.
Our little son's head or some time had been - ,Verfedly
orered a ith Sores. and some called it scald head. The
' air almost entirely', Otme, off,ln consequence, when a
Head. seeinglis sulTerings, advised us to nee your Pete
°retire, and we did So with little hope of success, but.
, uurl surprise and that of all our friends, a very few op.
lications remove,) the disease entirely, and a new and
" • au dant crop of hair moon started out, and we can now
' .y. that our 697 Inglis heAlthy a sealp r and as luxuriant
. crop of !lake, any other child. We tan the
• d do :Aggssplogsgityoneitirlitthial -
!mtslytt v 'a i . dise m,404
ases of the scalp and 'hair. e aOO,
ours res ectfully, GEOllOlr W. lIIGGINDOTII a 31,
.... - PARA!! A. LIGGINBOTHASI. •
. .
„ . . .
.
Gardiner, Maine, Juno 22d, 145.
,
TROIA. ,J. AVOOD.'—Deeriltri. I-hare used two bottles
V Profess a• Wood's flair Restorative, and can trollsay
1 is the g eateia discovery of the age for. restoring and
..ugioi; the hair. Before uslng.lt I was a man of Rev ,
:atty. My hair has now attained if x original color. You
iit reonnmend it to the world without the least fear. as
~...I, =SI) was one of the worst kind. Yours, respectfully,
,
1 - • • DANIEL N. MURPHY.
.
O. J - .:' WOQD d. CO...Proprietors, .312 Brohdway. New
Mt, (in the Grtall l NAli. Wire flailing Establiatunent,)
nd 114 3lat•ket Pirtle*, itt. Lapis, Mo. ' •
..dal-And sold by altimod Doiggists.
June In, 'lt
l
__ ___
ANTI-DYSPEPTIC- E L IXIR.I6:_
wapepsy 3, indigestonssyspepsy i
' ?MORBID • SENSIBILITY of the
Steiner!. and Bowels, attended with obvious dis
er of the digestive organs. ..
Dyspepsy and its attendant Ills, such as
Nausea, Breadaelie,! . '
.• '
Vertigo, Thinness, of Sight,
Ditrility of the Nervous Sysktst,
Hypochondria. Jaundice, • i
.
has of Appetite: ( i
Illesting of the St iritngth, -,
Fialute n e.e. with ire - relent belching lof wind,
Vitiated taste, - [ -
•
,••,* (bnatipation and uneasiness or the Bowels,
H Bilious Vomiting, •1
listening sensateoh at the pit.ll fh Stomach, .
Liver Complaint, 1 .
Opmerrien after Eating. • ,
;. I tilpitalion of the /cart, . , • .
[ Alain Merit of tint &smash, or towards the right side,
wstheispeesqf Ciampi...Man,
I , if spirits and trrilabiflly ar . temperi etc.,
if rein
at medical praett thiners in the world, and many cues
.
It: ve been absuidonedea Incurable: , .
)it, ,'.l. WILLMNii, Chemist and Pharmaceutist, after
et t dying elmely ilia "practice of Rm. dberpetbyand J.
~1( neon, England, and obserring , the nature of the dia . -
ea In all its stage., during a wdourn in the southern'
at western portion of the United Statee'*bere it pre-
V- Is to a greater extent than elsewhere:procved (rept
lc i s..h Am-tic/4 pertain root, and herb., from which he
p pared aa...Er..q18.7 which, after eighteen years' nue
In privaleipractine, gas proved itself pore ellienciods in'
• cure or ItY•soepaY, than any medicine that has ever
-n pripired in any age or any clime, for the same pun
wilary 20. '5B
),,y 4 li ni E t.
h - a ti p n vy il to er s s :e ig l n bte e bi d :mfrtioo h n.e a d
I
v oi ll e a ch rd ap —. th . a C pTiblie
...
Ikely ' • ' I
Dr, - - Goods sin d - _ rosary Store. L ~.
I". Store. in the building on Centre • -
tie . next to Frger'e lintel. formerly ot , L •-j -,,,
api by giillman & Chambers, where -- ----- .
ril
me a lly. Their TaheNlr e nwur n p op er"l 7t n i' dil o n
e d x a el:n4rely, a :&EIII
ma ina,•bickwlll enable
. ,
'. . 1 0.t•Orre limit 4 OALL!" - kli
,
I. • • I nEktrr k iIEKRIVEP..
I•pt ovine, April 3,'58 1 , . • 11-tf . • I
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p..-, . orrBYILTI - E,:', . ~ --e:s. '. 7 ttlS'
jk7''
'. . - , -•. . • all ow •ii • : .
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• . - . •• - - A.: ,;,. ~. , . C , T, ~
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limusimmi
•
I`l/ILL TRADE! YOU TO innteg THE OF TIIII .tirrtt; Astuutuf . G OUT VRON TUN L ATEENS xj9l METALS WHICH •99 - ii4Gag, arnalimin TO DUN HANDS AND BU EJECTALL.NATWILN TO ONAUSt AND FLNA6DFII.—DiaAPISON.
-•
• r• . •1;
.9,
'BY- :BENJAMIN BANNAN' POTTSVILLE. SeicilivrinT.Ti- rinnikrrir
I ,.BLISOED EV
I THE
WILLIAMS'S
Y SATUR.DA.Y MORN
MANUFACTURES.
• - FAIRI3ANK'S SCA4EB - •
rpHE.eubeenbers, agents for the. Dian
-11 ateettteers.bsteeltutt received,* new artielezalued
M.* "Uttlen Cannier/4 , 4e "ealehlated te weight:min 31
alio mice to .240 lbs. .yor elle at the YorkStere.
11.Y.AltDI,LoY
..•Poitsville, April '2Btb, 1858
SAVE YOUR TIME.
•
BEADY MADE PAPER BAGS,
1: 1 4 OR: GROCERS, DRUGGISTS,
OBNIECIONEBB, BAKERS, kr.—The Subscriber
respeetfalbr intents his friends sruilibe public that he
has beenwppointed Agent for the sale of,
Patella' Diselalne ,made Paper : Saga,
lIANLTACTUILLII. ST
Itemo:lohn Leman & Co;, of Phlladoliphia.•
These Bags are of sires and qualities of paper suitable
tor au. issasoas who ass the article, and are' ffeted at
each prices AS will at once commend. theta re t i ke con-
The are many advintagen In purchasing d using
ready Wade Bags. Where ntyhags are used, It requires
. double the quantity-of mawand Shingle peek the same
number of pounds, and wore Was Inputting up it pick..
Where an extensive bustoeu Is do.)e and - Bays mai; 1
by hand, by buytnaready suede Bags, one hand an be
dispensed with. By axing thew, you will net only-ease
time and Tammy, but always, have a convenient •reeepta.
ale in which to put up your goods. •
Wherever these Ba-s have been Introduced, they, have
given entire satisfaction. •
For sale at Aktnufecturers'priees by. •
BENJ. BIENAN,
'• • '• •- 4 Paper - and Book Dealer and Stationer.
'entre street, opposite Bpi's:opal:Chun*, Pottsville:
A • first nittpursortment of WRAPPLNG .PAPEE,
rays on hand: Feb. 21, 'ha 8-
BATE HOMEY , . THESE HARD TIMM
DRAINAGE AND WATER PIPE.
Tart the 'Meg :Wasted iss the - Jiinieg Region..
rillilE subscriber. has been appointed
Agent for the sale of the Titrilled Stowe Water
in Drainage 'Pipe. This pipe ranges In she. from 2
Inches vp to 12 Inches In calibre, and will bear . a Pre"'
mire of from Tb to 100' feet hill of water, is as easily laid
as Iron pipe,—connections can Denude at any point—
,. Indestructible—will last foreviii—ln.fact more dump
ble thin iron pipe, because it does not Mrst-and is af
forded at the following rates at oar •store,. Pottsville, or
tan be sent direct to peitits where Rail Roads run from
Philadelphia when quantities are required. Freight
...o mrted from these pricer' when parties receiving the
Pipes pay freight.
2 Inch pipe
'4 it " •
... 4, •
• .3.4.fi 4 ,
7 44 •44 40
10 . " " • • • • •67 " "
These are the cheapest and moat durable pipes that
can be obtained for conveying water. We believe they
can be laid eren cheaper than etciOdep pipetyand are
only about half the price of iron and lead pipes. Call
'and are them at the store of KLAN.
Agent for the Jlanyfadurere:
." • 21
Potbreille, Jane, 18b7
BOSTON agi,Tiria COMPANY.
Mae nine Belting.
THE experience of the past ten years
I has gained for this Belling the confidence otinanu
fliciorent and consumers!. The great Improvements re
cently made In Its quality. warrant us in asserting It to
be auperrlor to leather-for all open Bells,--especially for
hearyqr main Belts.
Its drat cost te much loss than leather—it Is stronger
And more durable. and gives." gain t 4 poweron the put.
ley. It will stand a heat of 360 degrees unaffected,—no
degree of cold or wet can Injure Its working.. In all re
'Teets It la recommended for Saw•Mllls, Minor, Grain
Blerntors. Machine Shops and Manufactories..
Urchin, Belting, 3 Wk. ;Ply. • ,
Scare of Prices,3 and 4 ply. from which an csltmale
of
the
prier of intermediate widths can he made. il
2 Inch 3-ply, per feet cenfa. • 4-ply, 13 cents.
•3 .4 4. 4. 15 •• "17
44 46 44 20 "
24
6 46 14
. 64 s• " 30 "
646 44 29 t ll 36 w
7 41 los 41 34 44 41 "
S
" (38' " a 47 ..
14 .ft t 41 58 64
• A
10 14 61 54 t!, Cr 69 U
11 " " 60. .5 ,
12 " •" " 66. " 46 33 to
13 41 .14 41 72 41 14 93 .
14 " " " " 700 "
15 u 61 le 86 , tt 44 107 64
1 6 it 44 44 02, n •n 115 u
19 " " 104 " " 130 "
20 " " " 115 " " 144 "
22 41 4444 12 7 u 108 aa
24 "" " • "
139 " „ " 173 "
Heavy 5 and 0 ply Bella made to order f r purposes
where great strength le'required; (as a substitute ire
double-leather) at an advance of twentrfrs' and tiny
per cent. on 4 plyprjcea.,.
leet4T
Hydrant Rose..
..11innetatitto.ate
1-2 loth per foot, •
n 39 71 y
• - 20 cents.
23
- - 25 " •
1 14 . 111 11/
' an:." •
1 3.4 ". 40 " •
45 :
3 +.• • . 1^ • . . . . to ft
41.'Plly Locals:1011re 411 t, Fire Engine 'lose.
lEgrropita To sta+l a pressure of 175 lbs. per square inch,
134 inch per 11,04 -.- - - 50 tents.
Ire ff 'TA • ft
2 1-4 " " - - • -60 .1 ,
2 1-2 " . , . • • . 65
234 " " 70
„ 7 5 •
New York Croton Hose, .• - 23 ”
'lose of any sire and. strength nude to 'order—alec,
Suction Ilose for Ftre Engines and other purposes.
. The above 'lose AN great advantages over leather, as
Woods no oilln f Ifeetly tight, will eland a very
high degree of w thou !Nary, and Is not a/forted
by the severest cold.
Couplings; Hese-Pipes, Be, tarnithed at the lowest
prices.
Steam Packing.
This article is now.in_griniral use by the most/MUNI
Engineers and3fachinisyvt throughout the United States.
It is prepared isrthat pia) Fahrenheit will not affect
it. and is superior to pverythlog else, as no substanre
has so nturfr elastirify . fhicifsfands so high a degree of
heat, and may be used it:nrall parts where packing is
micessary, vier Manhole Platte. Raton Rods, Steam
Joints, Sham Chests, Cylinder Heade; Stuffing Boxes,
etc., etc.. .
Parking made to order ' or. ill the various purposes,
Such an. !,41ANROLE PLATEN, Preto* HOWL Free Puxoze,
lioenno Coot WATER. Fusion; Vcrums Puirs, , Foor AND
DEUVIRT VALVE!. FOR STEAM ENotniks, Lc, .6?"
ifirThe subseriber has the Agency from the Menefee.
toren; of-the above articles. The Belts are this best In
the United States. and we furnlsb them in Schuylkill 00:
at lianufactu rent' priers. thus aiming the carriage to the
purchaser,: Our orders have also 'the preference at the
3111 Is oveC Stip others thr Belts to be made to any pattern
or thicknesa not on hand; as per agreement : we can
therefore guarantee the delivery of any Belt within-a
lined time after the order is received. '•
nounst R. '57 32 . BENJ. BANNAN.
• EXIV—AORPINARY
' Ci la. eAS is FL. ca dap I'l as a ,
Both Water and Fire Proof... I
lIE SUBSCRIBER' has been ap . -
. !
are p & in C te o d 's
celebrated F iirse p
a i n e dW re a d
te t r o Fruati l o Roofing,
—it Is composed-of - Veit, Umposilkoz and Gravel—
It I. more durable than eittier shiogies, tin, sine or iron'
—:requires no painting, and Can be put on complete at
a little over one-half the expense of Other roofing.—
. The advantages of this Hooting may . 'be summed up as
follows:
It Is both WATER-TIOGIT and FIEF-PROOF.
It will not expand and centred with heat and cold,
like metal roots. i
One Inch-to the foot l e all the Iticllnation required.
The roof can be walked upon without injury. .
It can be used for drying purposes. -
It is of great advantage to firemen when adjoining
buildings are on tire..
Itls not injuriously affected In the least by changes
of temperature.
It is adapted to every climate. -
It is not affected by the jarring di' machinery. I'
It wiil bear :nom than double thi: hest of sine, tin, or
galvanized Iron, witliont danger to the boardlng beneath
it. ,
•
I' It Is easily and quicklY repaired, if injured.
, Gutters of . the same material can be formed on the
roof.
M—
ITS COST IS UCH LBSS THAN THAT OF ANY
OTILEHFIItE-FitOOF HOOF NOW IN USE: .
insuiatice Is effected at the same ratesacon buildings
. covered' with other fire-proaf waterlals. \—
i Hundreds of cern lira tei can 1.,. seen at 11. Rannawa:
1
Rook Store. We append one or two to' show that it Is
no humbug:
We, the undersigned. hid our Banking House roofed
I with Waren's Fire and Water-N.o[4 Roofing atwint three
1 .years 140, and an far have bad no reason to doubt Its of
' r tiroey and durability, nor regret haring used it, and
I khould in building hereafter preterit to mi. other roof
:- InFs.,l,
•
elphLa, March 12,1857.
Putuputnua,
..Warts'',. It M. Warren 4 xxxxxxxsr: Jun
e 20, I
Was 1867.
pre
sentry Invitation, at an experiment with yourintprored
Flrenid Water Cionfectoposition .Roofing, on the 2lst
of H ip list. The °Neel, t suppose, wax to give persona
not *cal/elute.' with the nature of the roofing, In (ippon.;
see it tested. I arrived on thiground i about I
°ADO< and saw the board, put on the roof; kiwi' were
in a ho
,gh state, the edges not jointed. Or grooved abd
metalled. After the boards were „on they were cosersoli
layers of felt; and then bya, coating oleo*,
positto . and the whole covered with gravel.
A Ointity of combustible material Wati plaePd
and at Ihe appointed time a match was applied. A toil
otoLtiresoon bond from all sides of the house. and en
veloped the wholeisding Inn fiame. It continued to •
burn; for at leant • quarter, of an hour. At that
stage °tithe tire, f a desire to know how the roof
would stand if eater was thrown uprin Mai:Washed per.
million to try the experiment. which was granted, and,
I appl i ed three or four boards of water on the roof
whlett run off se though there wax no 'are under or
around it. `-\•
Gentlemen. th'y oplnton te. that en far aa fire
thatan
cern4l, it Is the best kind oFlVroof, from the tart its
air tightnesa prevents combustion In ease ors are In •
building where the roof W of ,your materiel, the are
would not be likely to extend. do the adjoining build-
Ings..ll bad en exampleof this kind last winter; on the
_ith day of January,st 4 o'cl •ek in the morning. A fire
broke•out in slow of Rack Reuses. on the south aide of
Seyb r it ; St.. west of 22nd street.' It had a roof of your
C.lOl itloilamd the are was ennaned to the, how*
whet-Wit originated. I have nohesitatlen hi saying that
if ft had been an ordinary roof, the whole row would
have burned down, from the. fact that it WAS one of the
(oldest mornings we bad last. whit er.an d the wind blew
a hutWirane at the time. fleybert street is north of the
Girard College wall, and at that time of the morning,
together with the coldness of the weather, made .1t a
long time before we could get water on the building.—
Notwli hatandlng this, we extinguished the are . without
InjerY,Lo the adjoining buildings:
I therefore recommend your roofing to the community
as • superior preventive of fire,
Very Respectfully Tours. hi.. •
.S3ICIEL P.ItHARON,
' Chief Sag-leen' A
of Me Fire Departures".
A ny i further Information with regard to this Roofing
ran be:obtained by calling on theeubseriber *this Rook
Stara, 'ottstrille. • • • DENJ.DANIVAIcor':-•
205. Ds • "'
Carpenter in the OreftereLlrottswafe;
WhaJwlll purer the Roofing at short notice,
/or ... 4 4111ery Establishments ; Miners' hoiden: - En,elne
houses, Itreekere. he . ln.this Region, this la Juat the
roof rertulokt, as It le fireproof, and no sparks falling on
It Will pet It on fire. '
ireedidngle,and tin asoesrovered with the material
If the Pitch is not too strip,
July 4, '37 • 27-
MANUFACTURES:
PORT CARBON SHOVEL FACTORY.
_ _ onartes Asois, ProPricier*
AUX/Alb ofooalshovels,spsdaussoaltiddlosokt.
" The patronage ot the public is respectfully solicited,
Jamul ry JO. 58 2.t(
- WATER METRES. • , .
. ...
rrlig Subscriber hiving. been author
ji_ - lead by the maxcntarturatra of Water Metres, wil
warply all order left with then's , - that Prim. •
_ N. YARDLEY & 801 -
Pollorllle. Anita! 30.'50 — • _ • • ate
. • . BAR. AND RAILROAD . IROM.-
rlildE . subscribers ; have flour - on 'hand
Hill gall tor CASR, at Mt Imreeigmarket price,
re large 'dock of the best quality merchant Bar Iron, nit
Bar Railroad Iron, and light T rails, for minus;
E. it ARDI t EY a 504..
Eitlterille. Nortcnber 01, '.57 ' 0-
.
.• . 80AP,- • - •
. ILE subscribers Invit ethe,.attention
of in liters and merchants to their nnionfacture of
ll N, PALE, and OLIVE SOAPS, te, &e. Then'
p r
Soaps having long been extenslcely known In Schuylkill,
Carbon and Luzern, countleitiare retonimanded as ot re•
liable 'Pilaf. Orden ftwelwed by mall lininptly Allen.
ded to.. itra-UlSoda, StarchAke,ilways on handMili•
~ .. ~. , ,
Anal,
ELKIhTON & SON
IP South Swain& Philadelphia.
junii 26. ' 5B " •-• : 26.6t0 .
VULCANIZED RUBBER HOBE,
ilyttradda, Lo.comtires, Pint Rapines, and (glom
r • t
1 1 .111 S HOSE tr great advantages
over leatber,:es it needs no oiling, is perfectly
g t, will stand a very high degree s or best without tp ,
Jury, and is nal aftacte4
incht severest cold.. It can be
bad of any 'lie from 34 . o 3 Inches Inside diame
ter—larger sizes made toorder. Aleo,Couplings.Bmnelt
Pipes, kc. For sale,b7 B. BANNAN.
Pottsville. May 23;
WILLIAMSPORT PLANINCMILL.
D
Sunbury & Erie r
ailroadßd and the Canal,
(Opposite the Furnace, Williamdport; Penna.)
a£o. S. BANGER 4 CO., Whole
lug Ale and kitait Dealerkand 3lanuficiurers ofirhlte
and yellow pine flooring boards,eash. doors.blinds:sbuf ,
tors, siding, wood mouldings. ke. Jl7, and well sawing,
fanny and plain. All descriptions of turningand planing
'done ,with promptness, and in the best manner.
February 2T. '54 • • 4-1 Y
• 14 mats per foot.
-. '24 .4 u
•
To Coal Op. - T NOICE
and achnylklll,Conn.
ty, Merchants.
SMOKING TOBACCO, by Steam
power—tOOlbs *day, at Hamburg. Smoking Tobac•
co and Segar 31anufaCtory, on bind and ready LA sale.
"MO barrets sweet scented Smoking Tobacco.
200,000 Half Spanish &glut.
200.000 Sizes, Spanish Segue..
100,000 Seed and lutes Segars.
Ordonothankfully received and promptly attendedAo.l l
Terms a y.. . MAST ANN 3101rEit.__
Hamburg, Berk. County, Pa.
Sil•tf
Bept. 5.'57
------
PIANO4AND•IVIELODK ‘v OPII3
Of the ben nantafeetnee...invented,
4 OR SALE BY THE'
_._.€
eenv s so ul lr by will Tu'in.'7,l„nndtelPiTir 114). Fri
not what they are represented. they. -c an be , returned.=
a ll
All kind. of Slelodeons will be sold 41, 31inufacturers'
cash prices in Pottsville. by whieb the piirehisers "pare
the carriage and risk or transportation. Pianos .111. be
sold rroro . slo to VI) less than regular city prices accord
ing to the value .d . the Instrument; Those who preter it
by calline.on up, and receiving a letter of credit. ran
toakethetrown aeleetionsat the nattuflietarera.aseertaln
the prices, and we Will furnish the instejmnent 'selected
at the alcove rates. If there Is sny doubt to this mat.
ter—all we have*. say, Is—TRY US.
•-•
' 11. 114NNANI
MAUCH CHUNK
Wire Rope Mannfactory,\-.
N i ii.eack.cqr Staameasrci,
Manufacturer of Wird Hope, for Inclined planes, duffs.
slopes, Ae., , would intgnu the public that be is now pre.
parcdtoALL KINDS, LEXOTI7S AND SIZES OF . FLAY
A.ND ROVND ROJ'E.
At the shortest notice. of Impeder quality, and on the
most liberal tense. at his Wire Hope Factory,
Ilineb Chunk, Carbon Co.. Pa.
Reference can be made to Mesas-E. A. Douglas, N. D.
Vert right and A. U. Broadhead. at Mauch Chunk: to N.
Patterson, Summit 11111, to Sharpe, Letsenrlng k Co.. TII
more, Luzern. county, Pa:. and In fact, nearly all the op.
orators to the 'Legion who have bees using his ropes:
August 8,'67 , 32.1 y
.
. .
CARRIAQE FACTORY REMOVED:
riIHE . nTitlersivied epectiiiily efn
ji brace thisopportunitynfinfortning-
..
_._
.. .1
the' public that they hatetromoited their ._:,- : ^
excel:Wee Carriage Factory, Irom Mauch !:•! ',-.-. - z-•••' -
clesuir - eirovviterr - tberiatvetreen
oince the late tire, to their New, Large and temmodloan
building;- irr 3.lr:rrhe Addition, on the old cite. where
they are r
t
epared to turn out CARRIAGES EQUAL TO
rug PE T IN TUE STATE and ready to accommodate
theircus `, more and all those who may 'favor there with
their pat . nage. Au entire new and, well selected dock
of materials and the acme old hands will enable them
to do work whlth, inelegance and ddiability cannot be
surpassed. .
They will continuo to attend to the burldesshereafter
aabefore, with determination to giro general. satisfac
tion ,
KeTAII grders will receive prompt attention.
2 - o.lteptitrteg done at the shortest notice.
July 11.'67, 121t.17 A BRIGHT tuuttniorp.
.
TAIRA.QUA'CARRIAGE dr WAGON FACTORY.
Horsesbeistng and Blalclissnithlng. •
Near the Corner of BROAD and CENTRE streets.
ri"HE subsetiber takes this method of
.informing the public that he hex become the sobt
prc , prletor of the above establishment, /Id he hopes to
conduct It so as te give satisfaction
to the business community, by em. , •-••••.' : ;.47;:.
playing none but the best-of work-
....:- c:::::. v., ; 4 ,7
men. and using - the best materlaW '
that can be found In the market,' Deingrthysolf a prae.
tlcal mechanic. I will guarantee all work-turned tt out to .
be.. represented.
• Jobbing work of all kinds promptly attended to and
neatly executed. He hopes. by strictstlention to bust.
flees and reasonable charges to merit a' liberal share of
the public patronage. • ' DANIEL DEAN.
Sif-D. DEAN has on hand an assortment of new. and
second hand carriages and exfeesa wagons of various
styles. Also, heavy wagons of all kinds. Old carriages,
bought or exchanged..
.._ March 13, IA 11.4 r ,
BUILDERS! MILL
THE SUBSCRIBEiLhaving-riss-.1
'lnhibited himself in Fottekille, -takes
Ibis 'method of informirig briildenr, ear.
pentare, and others wanting ahything in -;:gyy
hie line, that be le manufacturing, and - .
wilralways keep on hand—Sash, of alt ***climb,'"
Doors dr, Door 'Frames, shutters, Bllladlig
Mouldings and Window Frames. • _
Worked Flooring, white and yellow pine, eonelantly on
band. Orders received for bill stuff, hemlock cr white
pine.
Wood . .. Fuming. Scroll and Jig Sawing, in all the vari
ous bmuches, will receive particular ntientkon.
The machinery amt. In my establishment la of the
ghost perfect description, and all work will be manufac.
end from seasoned lumber, and warranted to give sat
isfaction.
My MILL In eitosiediu COAL FITIIERTi.nbove ,
gttn, next door to the Screen Factory. and those venting
any or the Articles enumerated will do well to give snots
call before purchasing elsewhere. JAS.
May I,'&e • 18.1 y .
-- .
. .
Saddle and Hia
POTTSVII,
rnesa m L an E
ufactory.
IHEREWITH :invite your especial
attention to my veu extensive stock of Ready lade
Mies*, [Furness, Wass. die-embracing the largest
variety of styles and qualities ever offered for sale In'
this county, and at prices that will compare favorably
eith those of any other house In the trade. . .
Ilavin; been, for soma Years - past,
1,, A 5::
In the habit of purchasing my
4g • •
' ' -- Rua dlatetica exclusively for OWL, • .
.
I find myself - now 1p the possessi on Hof wive:tinges
this cause unt enjoyed by the trade geneially, and feel
that I turn, with confidence, solicit the trade of all classes
of,dealers : and my arrangemente'for the miming sea
so'n's trade are loved upon corn a larger amount of bad-
Ain than I have hitherto dons; you can therefore rely
upon !biding at my establishment everything that Is re
quirril In myline.
Orders by mall era rospeatftilly solicited, and'the goods'
sent warranted to give astisfeetion, both as to price and
quality. - • :LEFIMMIt WOMELSDORPF.
. Opposite Episcopal Church,Centresteal, P6tlso il le.
March 1.185; .. ',. 10-Iy.!
_.........
SOLO.NI9N HOOVER. •
Wholesale and Retail
DEALER in Stoves, Ranges,
flleatecs,'Tin Ware, ilollovi. Ware,!
Janis Ware,' Brass Ware, French Ware, and -:44.
Cutlery, flange Boilers, Portable lianifes,Vas •
Ovens, SunOlier Furnaceotc.. *e., has added -""°'
to -big fernier stock of Stoves a variety of new pat
terns of Kitchen Itangea wf which be can give the
highest recommendation.
Ile calls particular attention to his new style of liar
ter which he la confident will make the beat II eater that
has ever been used In this part of the country; also, a
variety of nevi patterns of Cooklnv parlor, and Hail
Stows. Ile calls particular attention to his sheet iron
Parlor Stove, It IM an improvement In the Kisterbacb,
which he is confident is the bestatove in . use. Ile has
now the largest stock of the above articles (toiinumer
one' to mention,) that bag ever been' offered in this part
of the country. Ile invites his friends and customers
to call and examine for themselves, feeling confident
that he can snit them in quality and price; he flatters
himself that he his bad much experience In his line of
leasineas therefore he. feels confident that be cannot be
s'orpassed In quality Sr eheapness,
84rnootloy and Spouting and all kind of Jobbing
done at the shortest notice.
Ontre street. f. doors above Market, wee side, Ibritrills.
March 21, '47 l
2
DREXEL & CO
CA.RPENTERS , AND -. BUILDERS.
SCHUYLKILL. COUNTY LUNfiEll,
MANUFACTIIRINO COMAFANY
!LIMN. on band et th r extan.ive est trianant, on
Railroad street,* great qUantity of lumber ol every kind
and destription, which they can supply' to Operator , _
Carpenters and Builders. at lower rites then It ten be
bought. elsewhere. They are also badn es s . 'supply,
through the means of their extensive and la.
km saving maehinesonanufacturml a rUelea In their line
*fleecing of 25 per sent. rin - former cost.
Their large workshops have limn In suCentsful opera.
lion for the Out year, turning outcast. quantities of
Doors, Window Probers,
Sash, Panel Work,
Mouldings, Bed-pools,
minds
ShutteDr s aunt eeeee •
, •
And ail kinds of - 'Prasserl, l'oneled and Turned Mirk;
Which I bey have constantly on band. They are slimly
to essieutenrders at the shortest no:Semite. any quantity
or qiisaity of sawed or manufactures' stuff. • /
Dry and green !Unlock, of all kinds, for bulldlnspur.
poses. Oak, Maple. Poplar, abate, plank and scantling.
hwrdsr'Cherry; Walnut. Mahogany, its., for cabinet
work;
•White and Yellow Pine bahrdi lbr flooring. rear or I
made to order; White Pine plank 234, 2,1%, 134,
and% inch panel. elwaye ready; plank; beam*,
rails. %moiling, posts, shingles, lath; calling lath ; pali
ng: de.. at.
0..811110f sawed stuff arid ererrtbluir In their 1 1 / 3 0
011 bind or to order , at the ehorteektiottre . • . 1 - •
• Potterltie, 10.
*ATITIIDAYMORNING ! gaty 24, 1858.
Pettit).
"MI iiitingaiGerlii
THE ARMY OF BUCKETS,
IV VIZ V. n, am:
Forth trithetr*Er at earlytoorn—
Mir; thee/
Stalwart mow: Onlo Merl lows)—
Alt In a row;
Drava as an *rosy of aoldkr4thaT.
With buckets of tin
* Conquering *vibe tbry *eat ;tett day
A prise they win.' , _
Dloollawd and 011 rung! are 114 - 4 their trade:
"The battle of life" • .
They fight—With mattock, and ase,Wad irpade- 1 .
Fat.ffilliirea and wife, '
Raging the,ivaga that their boyhood knew, ..
Joke'
s cheerful glee—
Cracking joke' Oa a comrade true, 1 .
• lithietillevously: - •
Each, With hle leatket hang by his Me—
,' . dimmer ieltbia—
Cane not a stem tbr the glance of pride
• At Ate bucket:of tin. •
lbw t liter his laugh at the lemiarredi
• - With /as lordly gilt,
And bin hasdessalle whit* by the toll of dales.
In their tear and bate:'
The men
Y ra ht 4 lKelee r his i ds li ey
bread,
Is nobles than ha, wbes with hemmed pall,
Holds a haeghty had.
Erery - stroke itfui a freeman's band
Maine the world better.
Each furrow belt:rig la the goodly , land
Loosens a getter.
Dotter, by tar, than the glittering sword,
-
ket
Melt tothe ! ri t Vr, t l l L c
whirl, it . l l l l - t e ' lard,
• The world to win, 1
Home from_theiy labor, errening
Th na they go;
Stontypen, with the so il-stalued brow—
Sweet by theirAtlid a *Or.
steep, when their :task is done--
!Cerro t?a til lap S*t a w n ith tho ith .rising
' To r for wealth.
'Wealth, that ts better than sliver or gold,
dod a CODlhrlelire clear—
Health and strength. with their joy utdold,
• To the toper here:
Honor and praise to!t he legions "hang, ,
' With their buelteta of,tln
Nobly they're battling earth's great wrong—
• Gott help them to win.
polititd (tritpmy
L TO THE • ' ..
PRESME.NrOP TEE fUNITED STATES. -
Letter Twenty. Seventh.
The first of ell the taxes to be paid by land and
labor being that of transportation, it follows, Mr.
President, that it takes precedence of contributions
required fur Ole
.maintenatiee or the , S4te. All
that lowa can claim of her citizens is a share of
the few cents there'reciived for a bushel of corn,
and not a share of the many cents—paid for it ifi
Manchester. 4
} The lox of transportation diminishing with.
every , increase iq the power of combination noose .
(pent upon increase in the diversity of employ.
tnents, it follows, necessarily, that the poyrer of
the State grows with the growth of the power of
combination among its people. 'The farmer close
to New YMk, who. sells his corn at a dollar a bush
el, is more Odd to contribute to the support 'of go
vernment than his competitor of lows, who giyes
four, fire or. six. bushels - for a similar quantity of
money. 1 • , . •
Tbri - gteater the diversity, of employments, the
more is the tendency towards development of the
various powers of the earth, and towards the eyes
time of mandaetering and mining towns and vil
lages-reach conetitining a local centre of aurae
,tit.th, capable of counteracting the centralisitig
!tendencies of the State at largo. '' '
That thesej iiropositions are true; cannot, Mr..
President, be I. qinistioned. Being so, the general
lairs deducible from them would seem to be as ful
lois: The more nuaterotitthe demands for human
faculty, and the greater their yariety,Mth greater
is the power of combination among men—the more
- productive Must he theirlabor—the greater must
' be the power of the State of which they area part:
I.Btteli toeing the law, It follows necessarily, that
the less the cart in the demand fur liftman poyr
'7fiktrrifillVeltrerWittiffrosi ilietendetini(Oliather.
beuition of theaoil, and dispersion ; of inryievphs--
I,•every step in that direction being accompanied by
diminution of local power, and -growingsweakness
dr the State. •
l' 1 That such is the law we have proof in the actor
!pima revenue of England of the present, as cYon-
Oared with the England of the Plantageneth. ism!
ies those of Finnreand all the countries that follow
lo` the lead of Colbert, as compared with lielend,
rodia Portugal, Turkey; and all other countries
. th at lollop in the- direction now indicated by the
economists of England.
4 Moir, Mr: Piesident, is it with. ourselves? The
.. answer to this question annid seem to be found in
' the single', statement that: einployments become
'leis diversified from yeartu year; With each Coe
cest.sive year; for tan yenta pastinflir people have
ben more and more compelled to make their elec.
; boa between the work of rubbing the soil on the
ouri bend, and plundering their fellow men on the
other, the proportion borne by traders 'and trans
porters, speculators and peculators, lawyers and
politicians, office bunters and • office trolders, and
middlemen of all deseriptions,'l.6 . the whole mass
of society, having -been a constantly increasing,
. one. Great as, in those years, has been the ten
dency in - SW direction, it hoe increased tenfold
in the brief period in which you have occupied the
presidential chair—mills, furnaces, mines and ma
chine shops haling everywhere been closed, and
hundreds of thousands of people having hien re
duced to ehooseletwein crime on the one' band,
and destitotien, if not even death, on the other.
' Such, Mr. Presldent,iming the state of things
nutmeg the people, what should it be in the rela
tion of the people to the State? ' If increasing di.
cattle* of employments among the one, gives
strength for the 'Maintenance of the other, should
not decline in ,that diversity be attended with
1 growing! weakiitils the State? Assuredly it
should,and thhibil, matter' la sil,'We shall obtain
ahnedanterri4ertee;turn ,"i kwhat part of the Union
we •tuna. '' - ''•''.„,,/,. s .
ouking firer tO Netstr,Eltgland, e witness alai
effigration Wilms. crony's - Torkab e kind—each
1 and every stage, tgapief- being accompanied by
consolidation of the - , land,- diminution of cults-
,yatiop, and:decline of power to- maintain schools,
churches, roadiOsed"govermithot. From ono quer.
„ter we hear-that it has • becomi"ovident that the
numbeeof families in qui..tembei of agricul
, turd towns Is greeting is* it: . Tfie old homesteads,"
SS we are further toktObecome the property of
'the adjacent hustrandenanyor-go ici ruin under the
proprietorship Of tOIIIIO fOrittrlttliet." Froman
other,,we learn , that 4 tosing of -the 'Churches are
i" reduced to the pit extrenifty;:rind, "but for , the
missioneer society, by - iiikiels not a few of them
are supplied, would yield at once to utter discour
agement." Sorb being the general tendency.
throughout NeW England, the "wonder is not, that
so many eastern churches tire drooping, bit that
they have so lung borne up against the constant
and coplooS depletion of their vigor and thekpic:
' Turninglnost to Neat Turk, we bind aState fti'.l
which the average Yield of wheat Ilia fallen to lit
tle more than a dozen bushels—one, in which the
diminution' of the rural . populaiion,'and the coma..
lidation of the lands, become more rapid with each
successive yen Taking next, the
of the, State, one of the finest wheat-growing
aounkriesol the world, to. recently a wilderness,
we liOd its farther* alicady'engaged in discussing
• the necessity of abandoning the wheat culture, as
, the only trimY of freeing thetaselvei from the re•
.
vngcs of insects, provided by the Creator fur the
removal of diseased and decaying vegetable met
ier. Compelled to the exhaustion of their eoil, and
urinhicto vary their
,pultivatiori, their plants be'
come seeker from year to year, and more mid
more fitted to become-the prey of the fly, and oth
er enemies. As a 'conseqnenee of this it is, thkt,
emigration steadily increases, and that the pm+
• to maintain the 'local. institutions as steadily dor
cline,. ' • .1: . ' . . 1.
The young Ohio, now but little more than half
a century old,ibas already hemline; and for similer
reasons, the great emigrating State of the Union- -
the dim inution: iq the yield of hcr . land having
kept pace with augmentation; of the presume of
- taxation for bicalpurnoses. -Passing thence to the
yet younger Indiana, we - find the 'same great fact
=local institutiotia, that had biers self.supporting,,
having been I compelled to 'look abroad for the
'means of continuing their existences •
' ;
Turning now'sbutli, we see in. Virginia a coin,
mussily °cents,' log aloud, that bas.been blessed
by nature to an extent not exceedeti in the world,
and yet her government finds itselfeompelled to
tax tradesmen and tavern-keepers; attorneys nod
dentists; 'cloaks, hemp, pianos, carriages, stares,
• and numerode other commodities and things, for
the purpose , of obtaining the means required for
its support. 'Quite recently, it has been proposed
to lay en export duty upon oysters, as a means of
• topintaining ;the declining credit of the State !
Moving torn,out and sold her soil, she has little
now to deli, but slaves; and, as a neeesiary cense
quence;the busthen -of . the local 'institutions be
comes greater'from year to year. now, it is with
South Carolina, yen -have seen, Mr.•Prealdent, in I
an extract from • report made to the Agricultural
Soelety of that State, given In a for Mer letter.*:— I
, Georgia baselmost ceased to 'therein In papule-.
• tittle, although tier territory, properly cultivelad, -
'would support half the people of the Valois., Ala
bans; a State stint, but forty years since, wnol
most entirely Unoccupied, is following rapidly in
the train' ofjCarolina- m u d Georgia- 7 the yield of
her - mai demeasing—land becoming Consolidated
—.and the palm of extending, or even maintain
- log, anti:lM,, schools, or State, declining -with
each successive year. . • - ' • '
'.. The polle - j' Of the central groferament, Mr. Pete
!dent, lendsto the subjection of thir - fa'rmer, and
the plantar to the trader, and to this building wp
-of great cities, to be supported at the cost of those -
Veiy produce cost and cotton, and 'need to COD.
'same cloth, and iron. Look.l pray you, to the
• . ,
fact, that the cif
y Li. :*
1
government of New York tildes
expends this year more than $8„000,000. Who
ate the payers of these inillioe.? , .The trader }--
The speculator? - Ths •property holder ? . The
ship owner f It is none of theso—all of them ex
ercising the power to tax the unfortunate produ.
eerawho And themselves cots:pelted •to depend
upon distapt markets, aid to accept it single yard
of cloth in exchange for the eortathat toesammie,
in Manchester; ten or a .doun,yards. The mini
whO must go to market must ply, the cost of get.
flog there,. let it take% what form . it may; and
among' the Items of cost; that o r , lp tin talnin g the
traders, brokers, and'apeenlators of a city like I
New York„stande forth most conspicuously. The
necessity for going to a jingle and distant niarkid,
Increases with every year—every step in that •at.
• motion being attended by an auOuentatioo of ttle
power of the trader' sad. transporter, accompanied
by declinelo the ponersand and is the
prices of it. products.. These, r. President fl
ing evidence. of declining riviiiitation, wonted be
at little loss to acconot for:. the. fact, that .it • his
been hers declared, that "free society has proved
a failure," and that bondage is the natural Month-
Hon of the laboring man; be he !shit* or black,;
How is it with our central golernment—the MX.
ly one, claiming to to regarded as civilised, by
which it is ,held, that tit...defiant government
any limited to theproteetien of itself,and theeoM
pensation of its members and it. servants—leit.
tog wholly out of view the proteetiotrof the•pen
pie, for th e promotion of, whose ;interests it• yrs
established? ...._Do its demandaupon th e people
di
minish trust the decline in the powers of the lan„,
and in the prices Of its product.? Does the ferni
er, who takes 12 litisheli:stbere . his predecessors
had
,obtained 24, pay less to the support of the
federal government? Does the flour which he nen
sells for $4, contribute less to the support of fed ,
twat officers than :that which, forty years-tine.,
Wei-sold at $10? Dote the, cotton, which nsile
8 cents, contribute less
,for th *e
e suppurSof shiri of
war than that which sold itl 1816; at 2.5;? Is this
tobacco which commands $5O .cor $6O, less taxed
for the payment of senators andl representative.,
than that which sold, forty .year. since, for $lOO
or $120?.. Let as, Mr. Presidenr„! inquire. .. :1
In the Obit century which'followed the eloseof
the:wer of 1783, the highest expenditure of the
federal government, in time of peace, was $14,1.
000,000; andC)en, :hat amountliad been reached
tatty in the first te rn of General 4ackron's admini. .
istration—the average expenditure of his iminel
diatOpredeccssor, Mr. Adams, haring been sullY
$12,506,000, while that of Mr.' Monroe's, two
terms, had teen. $13.000,000: . • I -."
EIII
The average contribution, in die times Of MOS
see. Adams and Monroe, may fns: taken .aZ above
$1 70 par head. In General Jackson's Aral tern)
it was lesi—thirpopulation of 10.10 having beed
nearly 13,000,000, and the mould of contribatiod
only $14,000,000; or little chore than Candor pee,
bead; ThO reduction thus exhibited. wis evil
donee of growing strength of the !local p4wers -I
proving advance in civilisation._ i 1 1
Five-and-twenty years- have since elapsed, da-l•
ring the whole or which time, as yell Mr. Presidenq
have seen, the Antral governmeni, has beers eat'
gaged in almost ceaseless efforts tdextend its pow4 l
err, at this cost 4 the. local autherities. Marini
nearly all Molt period, its policy has tended to-did
minish the number of employments open Ito our;
people. to lessen- the power of combination for .
any useful 'inquest, to pnerease the cost of trans
portation, to make the farmer and planter more
dependent on the distant market, end than to re.l
introduce the' eolonbil tyetem, so; well described
by Mr: Gee,
from which we viers emancipated by!
the Isar of 1770. The result is seen in the thotsi
that; while the population basinereased but abonti ; '
130 per cent., the expenditure hez quintupled in. !
amount, and more than doubled io its ratio to the,
number of persons by whom the contributfone
were paid. I •
Why,lS this so!. Because, in opposition to thel
practice of the enlightened and civilized coon-.
tries of' the world, kis held by ohs central go
vernment, that the larger the spate occupied•by
any given numberof people,' and dos less. conse
-quently, the power of association and combinai
1 tion, the greater must be. the 'power of lltate.z-
Always on the watch - for the acquisition of land,
however poor- we have gone on, adding Florida
to Louisiana;'Texas td Ploridz,,Califurnia - to Tex
as, and Nei Mexico. to California; and now hold
ourselves ready, at almott anr_cost . i f honor„ .. or
of treasure, tetine proprietors Of Cobs, or So
nora. With ev ery step in that direction, there
althea st:easeseidsasfertnereeets or ti-fete motrerastes,
'end increase In the numbdruf pains! -officers—
with corresponding decreaie• in the power of the
people to provide the niesins required fur their ,
support: In all adianelig coun:rie - s of the world
the proportion of the. groceetia of labor required'
for the, purposes of govertiment, is a decreasing
one. 'Pfeil declining cotintries it is an increasing
one. With us, it iteaditylinereases—the. amount
demanded, per bead, being now twice ail - great,as
it was, when the - veiling prices of oar raw'prOducts
wore more than twice as high as they are now.
i That the progress of mad, whether towards can.
tralixation or localization, slavery or freedom, bar:
tourism or civilization, le one cf conitaat accaleru4
lion, is a truth, the of, whiilft found in
every page of history; but now,bano, Mr. Presi: j
dent, can stronger proof tie found than in the ris. l
cords of our treaenry. Fifteen liars since, neder, l
the administration of Mr;Tyler, tha expenditnris
of the federal government was $23;500,000: It iii
now $70,000,000, and there is every reason to'be4
Here that, before Iffeend et. your administration
it will reach 0100;000,000—the necessity for shi
r i
of war and soldiers increasing withithe deillati ii
value of all the 'commodities we loin to sell.--+
Five years Circe; the expenditurealef New York
city were under $3,000,000. They Istm now ES./
1 300,000, and there is every) reason tis believe that 4
belpiro the close of another decade; diey - will liar -
largely grown—the power to tag the farmers ant.
planters of the etiuntry, , growing with every step
in the p.-ogress towards reduction of the papule.
lion to dependence on the sale of the soil,.in the
form of wheat and cotton,-for the insane of pro
sent support. . ' i • i
For half a century, during Which the Federal
government was administered by Washington and
his successors,:down to Jackson, the general ten.
'deney - of its action was ,towardslearrying into
practical effect the Decleratfon of lour Indepoil.
donee. During nearly all that, time there was a
general tendency,towarde increase in the diversi
ty of employments; with constant increase in the
power of association, in the strongh of local ac
tion, and in the steadiness of the currency—no /
general suspension, in time of pea e, having no.
curred In all that time. In the period that has
since elapsed, this policy ..of the revolution- ha's
been abandoned,yi l th constant increase in the de
pendence of the planter and firmer upon the dis
tant trader. The power of local action, therefore,
steadily decline/P.-with constant diminution in the
respect of central government for lois! rights, and
growing instability of the eunasney-the suspen
sions of payment, in that brief. period, having
been no less than three in nutntxir. I
In the half century from Washington to Jed
son—the policy of the country haviog been. that
Of peace, and of the extension_ of that dcitnestie
commerce you lave so well descritoolthe_Pede
ral government was economically administered,
and the power to'contributo to its ant/port was a
steadily augmenting one. Sinee theit—^the pulley
'having become that of free trade, annexation, and ,
war-..the expenses of the central government bevel
greatly, increase, while the power to contribete to '
=its support, or to that of local institutions, has
tended to diminikh. 1 In. shrillest, Mr. President,
all the phenomena we .meet.are thole of its ad
vancing eivilisakion. In the other, they are those
of o; declining one. how tar the one, or the other
has tended to the production of strength In W
state, I propose to examine in 'another letter—re
mulcting meanwhile,
-
With afent tweet,
Your obedient sery6iit,. . ,
• 4 Heil* C. CAIIIT.
Philadelphia, March 12, 1858. 1 I -
*See note toletter XXII'. ' 1 i •
lioceltaa.
. . OUR ORLY ROPR 1 1 • ,
With characteristic beartlessuesij the Denthcrst- 1
is press of tenneylrania, with , hiirdly an Oxrel
tlith, is mockingat the moremOnillif the PssPins
to obtain by judicious legialatthi tiM establish
ment of a Protective Taiii. T si I &aadard; of
thii Borough . , Which elaimi to b e he exponent of
orthodox Democracy in thiS Coon, „Ismers at the
attempt flow making to obtode refOini in this mat
ter, and heaps epithels upon ProtsMtinistsi in Ile a
ortithig argon:loots in a Manly waft, against a
measure which finds no fever with its party. sot
withetanditig; however, I the hostility of the Do.
.ocracy to a f'sttective Tariff, and their efforts to
thwart the designs of the people in Ibis matter, '
i
it 'is a source of gratification to know that the
1
w4kinginets of' the country are fully:alive t o the,
importance of an "uprising for Protection, siaiilar!
to that whiebserept, the eciuntry i eighteen years'
ago. When thiesivoision of 1 837 poised ever thisl
enitntrys ; 11 10 Topple in due time awaktuul to the'
coaCictioit, that it grew out :uf, sod : ilia the oon-1
sequence of the abanduauseaS et ,the Tariff Pidissy
by the Compri:twin of 1832. Rom 036 to 1842,
the moftetary affairs of die ebuntryli daily grew
worse. - Agriculture laugulihed hecauSe Dearly the
the Oaths nation' 64 becOnie piWths4ers, by the
closing of , our Cotton end .Woolen !histories alwf j
the discharge of laborer' from ism* mines sad
tasaufectories of every description'. And with the
prostration of manufaetures mud Itba stagnation
• l; i
of agriculture. Comities of course, as a matter
,
of nettesettr; ceased : to' give empl,iyinent to our
Peoils, aid failed. to remunerate- those engaged
in
_IL - '• '- ' . •'' . ' ' II
,
At length tie•nicand fisiiiloot of the People,
wets teached thtonzh theit sabering,; and the
MBE
Tint 6(.1842 ; theleij,ttmat„„ remit of rm .
eon being pertettted to inflimiee liiirjediftifii i
and - control of th peoile.. ,That gm I
• i
Ineealita of. Preiteetioe, .aii;lag like ileettielty
.apna the demist /flimsies of the American - pee.
ple;:and within "oue. shorti f ioeth, blanefiteterea
and" CoMmeree'reiri Ted * and the alpieeltnriat.' fopt
that i large portion of the Brahmans were about
becoming Conalmerc, and liremild ties furnish 'a
Nome market at remunerative priees,' for 'the pro
~osen4liof their later!. .And4is our respected con.'
iiimporary,the New , Tork ~ C eurfer and Eaquiser
truly remark ever were anticiPations -"more
certainly-Or- mo rapidly teethed. ' Real estate,
!blab had been ( d .drug epee :the ;Markei, once
f more became acl vs; sod oar . Coal aid Iron mines
seep forth the lb busy ham of contented, because
rewarded labor,- while. the Cotton sod Woolen
... ,
manufactories • Which bad inspeedel I operations,
: proinirtlY t tesuniMil their labors, and new (mei
aprilig areal! by tiiagic., in almost every- city
in the Northern (Stites, • Never before, isitinch
an lewdest given to the labor of I libido senate,
as by the Tariff teat of 1842 i.- and Wit had been
permitted to exist n o w, untouched , tintilj the Unl.
*ld f3tateiwinild this 'dai . .have been 'she Tidiest
dl
i
lin tbe•most . perooi,...asi- ft, la ibtehappiest
I
.;country on the mite. ,_ Bat the.Denimititie Party
_,.„
!decided otherWisS; and becanse the 8 ; ooth, Igno4
Iranof their trin interests, demanded I.the ;repeal
of .the. Tariff of 1842, Northern Doughfieekfruisi
poli4eal cm:lshi i :lathing and.' in order, that' they.
might divide' ' engglemielves th e. spear
. ar
!Ic.+7,r reimiale i ll thik great pan inita „rot our
?country's sutreri4; - fad - gave as iistead, the
Tariff. of - 1844 r f ;..
', -. '''• • ' I ' '; '
1 if, bap that.mosidissitriousebaege iu oar ielle,, ,
was laccoinplish4 intelligent Men and considerate
itatitsmem . did not - fail to predict they inevitable
Ounr i cquektees ; anti those itinseqtiences averteck•
us le 180;:iindluerieinly aa we noel ; write, will
.. 1
.nontinue, to cram • the energies abd
...' depress the
i'indttry of the ctiuntry,' wail's's; »tern •to the
~
'poli y of 1842. It required then five, years to
apetti the eyes of I Pia people to,. e knowledge, of -
Whal it was diet figment them lute the earth mad
reJneed our likoling pOPulation po a level. with
the attPer labor of Europe; and f i t may take as
iong i now to .accotopliah • the samii purpose.. We
think not, hoWeve.' All parties begin to concede,
that 'mince 1848, sr . hive itnpUrttui Pao' . the Mei,:
led . atom as4.t
orth of g '
s, at te, I.ve itiedret4;aeinfoseojsioi- -
001 E
!are le ;etich-eoiild barb ham, and
Would hive been ., manufactured it heine, if the
Tarigof 1642 hat Trot been repealed. Nay, every
fair minded man Will admit. that it we bad been
Oeraiitted to remii i t''the duty of lBd3 - of the soli.
Lary item of Iron, not only would ibis ,all impor
iant 1 braiich!of ational in dustry have' t,ti
_1 1
-thoroughly dowel° d„ giving employment to tens
Of thioussuds of milusuineriof Breadstuff's., but we
Should at this mionent have. born. exporters of
Iron at thikeame)itnothat directlyand indirect
ly, at one item ocrthe Tariff of . 1842; would have
iddrflio.the wealth of the nation a thoutand will
lionsLof dollars. hen we say that our imports
- , •
Would have been helve huidrtd millions leis, it.
the Tariff of 1842 ad not been meddled with, we
iitmust net be undo tood as estimatinfits value to
She country at oaf, that sum,: Four. times that
.lam would be a inueh nearer
_eitimati of ;bat'
Was imuri fi eed to p rty subservie ncy in the. Tariff
of 1846. To havil avanufaotutei for ()unwires
what had been isStiesearil,y imported undet tbet,
r- - - 4
suicidal meas u re,io4l4
: have developed . the 14-
itoureas of the coultry to an extent which up fu- '
tire folly In Legitlation • could have destroyed,
'and built up home !,markets and furnished a body
`of ans II iiai:Weirill'ltatt t14111441,1"41.4464:.
to the agrieoltuiistireceunerilive prices fOr'his la- ;
iiir; and to the manufacturer a never failing source,
.
of pretli.' And witt agriculture end tainufactnres
thriving and pro* rout, .he mast be indeed, an 1
ignoriiiius; who , d.tes not, know that cornmerce, '1
I. . ,
their hand maiden . neceisarilyoroultl dourleb.—
...
tis then, in our'. j dgement, absolutely itnpossi.,
ble fur nian to esti,mato the loss to otlr. country ,
, from the Tariff of 1848.! Its effects ore partially:
;visible in the . iertiiiina of lest Antonin, and In the.,
treient depressed...state of our Agriculture, Mann.
•fartuies find Cornoterce; bat the end is not yeti
. I When and wharelis the eat!? TOui the answer
to this question ii exceedingly simple; as nothing
ibut the 'Tariff of
. 8.12 enabled' the (wintry. to re.
t
...
rive alter the revublitin of .1837, so Clothing but it,
similar mettaure wiii enable' tit to surminsof the
revulsion of 1857 The' present depression le
i every branch of i
. thastry,' Lice than of 1837,11
the n a tur a l and predicted resuit 'Of an - insane 'di
-.., ,
termination to 'prottat the pauper labor of Europe.
4 nt the exp ense of tie comfort pad welfare or oat;
; 1
I a wtt peopl el; and WWI we apPIY the'laMti 'remedy'
. i es we'did•in 1842; kitereiii no help for us,' These,
are disagreeable trathsi but not the less* truths
.because disagreeable. ' : . •• .
1 i The panacea for ihe disease must now as, inliii;
i.seet !days,. be . applled by the People. We are
1 flrl .• happy in being ablc.te say that 'as* far as
I.;Pt
en sylvania is 1:1 oil re rn ea, Ihetititt very gener- i
hily, eking up -to la knowlediti of : Oat consti.
1 totes their true interests, and that tiey..irili be
i lure to demand sunil legislation as the wants or
1 the eouniry so itlipewskftely demand. .In .the
I- meantime, let ever, refloating 'man bear in wind
I ert. in greati facts s! . • - • •
I 1
t .Ferst, The Farmer to he prosper o us, opti have
k mitirkot, col
.laii. lir04.10a0; and the 'miter • seal
I inarllet, Ei 't his oor, the more it gill benoflt
im' . . • -
Seraicity . , It foil ws the( a' Ilooe market le
hettir than Forei n market.- A 3 c l , •,.
1. 1 Thirdly. here ' nbe no Lowe market so long
i *:
I pa, oitr peep e are driven frost our- mines end
inaonfaetor whor they.oottoore the Prodeee of
1 the Soil, and' by being furcni upon the soil for a
livellhood,i4ouseprotittorr. is/Lead of ecowassers.
i, Now, the Tariff of 1516• ee'd its amendment/I.ot
-118.571, hare closed oer s isournetorles ! land mines,
;and compelled us to herome ti mittenofprotiscers.
1' We jj,IS aiSrket • and consequently, are n u °Me . are
s
anti
llly d ep io,o upon a Fweigii Market, which
jilt re elated - by
-the crops abroad, and by the con.
i ting now o r i ptaco orOtar. Thhatite whole Ameri.
!eau . ' talon and - the
.happiness end proeparity of
four it s , sre placed at the mercy, of the crowned
;.head of Europel li such the dear e of our peo- -
'Plit ? j r so, let thens t ipersevere in the Democratic
i
la m o s of Frets Tre e, s and they wilkhive what
'Owl ish to their heit v it's coati at. .':- -
...
il:Oni
;ward as ' to the relative 'value of a Hom e
i
land f oreign market ,' , we have, done. •.. In 1847
!titre Was,a fistulae ib Ireland.; and. e were in.'
'intleb ed:to that ap4 lat Provideace of God; for.
)1 - 1 . 2 ex risiee Fikeig market and high prices for
hhr A rieultuald Pruce. Dot * up' to that time
'romti ot le Peace Of 1815, the little State of Musa.
these s with her attufaeturing population, eon..
um* more *barrels .11 Flour; gruel without her
t .
. 4in each and every year, A c
tsar Cit artists.
(f s,
Stotts export to ail the- luitioni oil the.
vier/ ! - . . . • - .
. . . . . ,
... .
i Let the farmer red t upon this fact, and gather
`tom It the value.of 'Home market; and then let
*im ask ht w t would be the heneflts'.re
t ; •
?onto fro m a pri Policy' •
which should build
.ii'p a - ant(factory an a Homo market in every
Douai yin every State. In-the Union; or at; all
4.enti, in every F1:11111 tete?' With half our papa.
,littion drawn front th . soil and employed in mines. 3
gad Manufactories me they
. would necessarily
*',. otne Consumers lhatead. of Producers, and'a
salt lothis Prottecte at the Farmer's door,
'ec
mould not the pricel 4 'of apieulturel prudent be
tinadruilo - a hat 'they. must inevitably• beeline
Were our whole
,population -our Produeers„and
their prodeits.hare t4.be sent thansands of miles
4. the sea : board .a then 'shipped to an over.
Stocked market in Eu4pe? Not many years since,
l lNClictortivirseas tol4 at the Brea for ten'eesie a
he' ;shet, -
a k 5,413
m! wheat forte teats. Go tines
the oestlog Tariff ,Avid he will ,be a fortune" an
who eau !calla" theslprieee.in the "atiey of the
illississippi, and vha then became of eentuen t le ?
the merithantorho lisporte merchandise to roll,
lied better shut-op' Me. atone 'and sink Ms ship*
than Fell' hie-goods toga pauper population, who,.
/riuditiou 'lacest!, been reduced to that
the /European pa by. the Free Trade Prin.
Opted of the Denorettiej: '
Let the Illemorratid, Onto of this State entiSine
o stoet the People lit their diem/I. ; It is befit
;
1- •
BANNAN
STEAM lIIINTING OFFICE.
- -
' Itirrhle rotund throe Preemie, we are seer istepered
to Snot s ain 10Waild DOOR PRINTIIRTer daserip
pakall saw olio et tielltnone Anauun, shoves than
It eon Dodoes at say other estalilahateat la the toasty,
axb as
itoote,assights,-. _ Mate Zoiftnt;
o
LAW Zen, „Roamed Batts.
• ARts, . Pinto Beets.
Artistes to" 4,,intanst, nee Thsh,
ROI Zhou. Orler Bode, de.,
At the esey shortest sotto. Our stook of Jos rips is
MGM lAIRISITIthaa that of say other oillenie Ude see
up. of the State, and we key bandaseepkoyed esponely
2001i04. Rang • pectin! !water earselL we rill
granastse oar work to bet airman as any not can be
turbojets( In the ettiles. - frairrirso IN COLORS dome
at the shottest notkeZ
I ~-,
_r
~:, ::.:
1 - ~
• BOOK BINDERY.
Hooks bound to emery impiety of idyl*. Moak *Doh s
of .dsoedptba'maaatiotorod,boundant;MN to
olid
order at shortest notes*.
NO. 3Q.
Slag Democratic. prtuelples that their Journals
should care but little for the lettersets of the Peo.
,pla; .Eu 4 we ',lran theta "to balsam Next Pall
adq teaelt.the Deatosmatie party of this Stets that
Is eanaotarltls hepoutty. Walt the People la their
prima Caret& • - •
- -
Woaxustiman'a Tlexix—The workingmen
•
of Og e Region,at.leest the& portion who hare
heretofore -been Miluenced by that miseblivous
,sbeet the .Workarra'a Advocate..havo determined
. to eat the *ding of, that paper adrift, tbey
no eentldeoce,in him. In doing this, they are
, right..:. At, the same time we think they would "
err, antljeopardiae seem% aa far id emediog en
out end out PritioUve Tariff, man to Contrail to
concerned, by "framing a ticket repents fives the
People'.,. AU clefts' In this Regioo, the minim,
••
the mechanic, the operator and •dm Inas, whose
brainwork Is hiilivelihood, bays a comma inter
est. If one branch suffers, all surer. A mouton
Interest therefore, binds. all to seek reform by a
tboieugh union 'at the bellot-box. We canoes
- Res - Ably, urge fen streogly open the worklapiett
of tbisßeglon, the urgent necessity of adopting
steps that will semis the eloodon of an ueeleep
tionable meet* ConiTl4Bl - e uses ,whe will ea
brace all seetione of the country ,within the drills
of 'Preteetion
,to American IndastrY.: Ms with
their, wish to see no old hackneyed politialemr.
whose trade is to seek omee, nominated. We
wept to see an able mao, fresh from the Peifpla,
selected; one whose laterorts are identified with
the workman's, and one Whose iota* and isle
'nee on the fbior,of Congress, wiU seams what we
heed. Altbough l this should not loe a party mat.
ter, wa tell jogworkMen, you canhopeforooaid,
from the so called Domocrithr party. Any alli
ance with ibietniiwimid be fatal to you; would ee
-1 suit in no brined to you. purely, the Free Trade
enactments of that party, martlegoviare you that
what 'we allege is • true.. Toni true and only
amino for success, la a tbor'ougb union with the.
'People upon a good man. Adopt it, end you will
!trite a powerful blow for Protection. *Reject it,
ind we would not give two-pence fur your chance
of erecting anything fur Jour dep d interest!. •
This is a • serious Matter. The Free Trade De
moeracy will be overwhelmingly defeated in Pena- .
sylsania at the coming Fall election. It remain:
for the workingmen of the Eleventh Conversion
.2l District to say whether she shall be among the
victors for Protection, or. whetem 4 she will bei
represented in the next Congress
. by another ' Ice
becile in intellect; a sot, Pro Slaveryite sod Free
Trader. Senator Hammond of Booth Carolina,
asserts that Northern workingat , tut ere the muds
silo of society . ` lf le.
1 the insult not hurled bank
Info the teeth of the arrogant slave bolder, by our,
workingmen, in October next, we'will confess that
we have placed a false estimate apou their man
liness.. Let them du it by sending a MAN to
Congress.
,Ter FOR:moons:4a &UTZ Fatte.—The Penusyl
rani* State Agricultural Society will holdlle
eighth ennead exhibition in Pittsburg; on the 28tti
of September, continuing till October Ist, Inclu
sive. The book of entries will be opened there
on and alter the late! /3eplealber. Tbe.premium
list has been published, sod, we understand from
the Pittsburg Chronicle, will Fe forwarded by the .
secretary to all applicants. ) ft "iovere twelve dif
ferent glasses of sproduetlons, intdinsepreuthuns
for inventions useful to the farm . AnyWrticies
• deemed worthy, manufactured oriron, Metal,
- brass, leather; India-robber, aid artioki - couip;se-1
of cloth, fur; bats, caps. umbrellah, Le, cash
prtesigeo,Pitd.diplomas smst be- awiledsd to. Jae.
otish,- Ilisip,:a4-Rvativtiwille:-Peryeete comity. as a
second premium, efforts ;ONR-blood Merino beck
fur the largest end but display of canto owned
arid held es farm stook by the exhibitor. Rail.
roads will furnish the usual facilities tad! traps.
portation of stook and visitors ti the fair. The ••..
plowing match will take place on -Thursday, Sep;
leather - 30th. The Sold of competition is made
co-extensivo with the Ukited States, and the so. "
ciety.eordiall,p invites the citiumi of other States
to compete for the-place.
GR.A.II/1161: 3:IACIAZINE..—TO cure ennui we pres
cribe confidently, a dose of Leland's 'Tay Talk.*
By mil.' faith, the siiiiried will And 4. an attics'.
clues remedy . . It is as invigorating as huge draughts
of brerile 'after s month's str.sitering in that
popolouiliake oven, known' familiarly, as'a city,
and fusses good blown to the sparkling surface of
Os; eall ' of life, re above the nauseating dint. '
A genial soul has Leland, and we are not surpris.
ad that b is brilliant fen has accomplished so much
in lerrdcrinc Graham popular, and successful In a
p ecun i ar y point of view. The August Dumber
stmuntis is good things, from the tint engrssing.
ig o l ug Sehool,7 to the "Ladies DepartMent," •
(iii r m..ted.) Subscriptions received by Watson
& c a . Bulletin Building, Philadelphia.
At a meeting of the Association for,the promo.
IA of. Canadian Industry, held in Toronto last
scab, and which was attended by twenty mom.
ben of. Parliament, beside many others, molls
lions were passed, "urging the necessity of tepid
'Wog . our tariff with th‘t of the United &situ,
will' a View to preparing us for free trade in man
nEcetures with that country. and also recommend.
lag that the Government should be empowered to
raise the duty du cotton goods,' alter due notice,
wheperir . there was a certainty that their so doing
would secure the establishment of cotton menu.
lectures in Canada."
ART/;AN" is the title gr &Air eekly
journal published In Cincinnati by the American
Patent Ooppafy. Its object as aided in its sale.
tetory, is to furtherthe interests of inventors—to
guard the riglits'of patentees—to fgraish informs.
tichfof new discoveries and inventions—to con
stitute a medium through whkh Inventors may
make known their opinions—to - give 'direction to
the inventive talent of our country—to propeily
set belore the public the merits 6f any patented
apparatus whatever,' and to furnish one of the
most reliable newipaperkin our country. . 4 ,, •
Oast Dieuvta's visit to Washington, is we
cutproce, for the purpose of'reporting to thilkOuvc,
eminent the conduct of its oftleers,in Kauai, Who
have. been concerned in some. of the .dastard 4
ontragit there. The muter' near Port Soon, wai
the' work of these demonise' Officials. After shoot_
tug down in cold blooki, a dozen men, charged with
no.crietee the ruffians departed in search. of new
adventures. Pretty appointee!, truly'. .President
Buebanan is choice in hie selection': •
PANG IROu 6 PL4lllll . 3losl.—la Philadelphia as j4r.
our Borough, on the kb,* ere was known
to have. been occasioned by the gyration of a
"chOser." We think that this dangerous Species
of fireworks should be brought into ilium. We -
agree with the'Sioulay Diepat4 that it would be
a glorious thing for eyes, faces and clothing, and
for koala, which would be in some measure In.
sureef, rsut fires in consequence of :the disuse
of tile devilish explosive. •
LIMISUA &$D TIM SLAVE.TRADIL—Tb•
dolphia Americo* denim on lbo authority' of it
!oink , from
rmideot of
ittilarit. has
novires by
to prior!, i
which or
• La a late
a couple of
Wattiliagtoi
to uve it
"Thu Tariff
,fa I/flood '
at ergo flu
listi it. IL
dice your
BKNI. H
=embers of
and bitherl
lien each I
went nod
Tin
delta inpal
ttezzieniont