, ' TE.513 OF THE MINERS' JOURNAL. 3f361.11 1101*CILIPTION: , • 'or') DOLIAkS per atitfula,peyable la *dream 11 $1 41 If n•tt 1,,til aithia sit. tau uilLS— suit $2 30 , • ,tia w% , i , ithin i Ile y car. • 4 . ' 7',3 CLICER:; ' , . .' , j o .;, ~ il6 ..hirciasOu xdratied,.) $5 00 10 ao do , do 20 Ott -,1 • ‘.l. •'.. •ripti4se mail be i scarf/atty plthl /Et tit , • t . •e, .nd Nett: to one' address.. - ' % .TO 1:4.100.41 *ND 011111/S1 • . ~ ~. ti . loinlitt. or ii I be furnished to tkrrfers arid ollittrit tt SA per I.n) caplet. Gish es defirerY- .. . .., . -Ir. q! , riy 40-4 and .5,5 mi lkacker , sliPPuttt oil tl the A:Litt...a 61 in ndsenoe. ' . " • ', , • rat t..tir or otrigirrarns. ' . 1t -'t b.:r lb;r< • , r - ter Ibe dlmoailatraneerof their hews. ~., , r . . i. , 14 p d. , i 1 ,1, e , mk r continue to send theta until 1 11. irretra 4e.• a re p dd. Ii ..,1 •,,-6,,,rs ',alert or reface t. tsko their neeepx. ore 1.-ous Eta •dice to vetch ,teey are directed- they are Id reApoosible anti! they have.settled the bills and Bred them dis,-ootinued. I f sti h i ,4l,,,s Ma re to other places wjthnut informing •3 publidor,and the newspapers am ___, , .._ . twin 1.0 sue:ormer r,.ctioa, racy sro bold rerponsin , le. ' to take neer 4 ype: no .r,ort.nsre ,leolled ihtt refatlag , „%,,, 0. 01" e• d' 'dlloyllig, and tesotex them 'tin' , 1,, i , ,I, tri aI ; el. ovidenre of Intentional Iran . .. . RATES - OF ADVERTISINC.. • ~„, .. l uArt , of Ito Hurt,. AU rents forAnabltiscrilon—inab ,ookin,ercionA. eellts each. 3 lines one time 23 lasortious,l234 cents each...,A1441- (lA - ell:teats ore! 3 lines, for ahort:periodai charged as a pro.•, OPP. TWO. PRUE. Pik. MAUI: b rex nor'!, • 63 89 $1 25 $2 25 - $3 00 •'urlines, SO 125 • •176 - 276. 400 100 150 2'.00 • 300 " 15 O 0 •is 110..., I 125 223 • 260 400 600 . Intl• 125 225 270 450 700 r.:l4htllna. 125 2 . 2'85 • 500 800 s, i n . twee, r 1 25 225 !A 550 900 ILI. 'WWI VI LINICO ooirstitiAs A PKWAIX OP TEA ulna: Ono aluare, 1 25 2 23 3 50 00 10 00 I'.o'sluar.l4. 225 400 500 900 14 00 78nte.Nitsrel, 350 ' 500 760 12 00 18 00 Four squares, .4 54) • 600 8..00 14 00 20 . 00 Quarter ail., 600 OAO 12 00. 18 00 30 00 . 1 . 11 1.3m0 spare for ,hurt porlods,,pc per agreement. 421rIlusloess Notices, 5t each--ilecompailied irlth ao • o,rrtloptpent.. 50 cent, each: . , • . Advertisements before Marriages and Deaths, 10 cents .r II ne for firsninsertlnn—subsequent Insertions, 5 cents rr line .' Nine wordsare counted as• line in advertisiog. i,tratants and others,ldvertising by the year with %aces. and a standing advertisement nett excteeding 15 will be charged.including subscription, 16 00 -tr to the amount 01 tour squires, with chem ., and subscription. • ut rhanges, at the rates designated above: • itirertisements set in larger type than usual will he ,r-tri SO per cent. advance. on• these prices. All cuts ,I 1 ba ch trged the LIMO as letter prima. ye Trade advertisements received from Advertising cots abroad. except $t 25 per cent. advance an these -es. unless by special agreement with the r obi isher. ltrri ages 25 rents each. Deaths arrom raided `frith no. is. 21 cents. witbont.notlees, no charge. .11 notices. except those( of a religious character and Ausational purposes, will be charged 25 cents forany ofiltie6 under 10. Over 10 lines, 4 cents purling - Itional. rococdinzia of meetings not of a general or public char pr. charged at 4 cents per line for each Insertion. • facilitate cairtilationa we will Mali that 3.18 li nes co a column—Mt lines vp half coluine—and 82 lines a irter column. 2932 words make *column-147d a half Itun—and 738 a quarter; column. 'All odd lines over h squire. charged at the rate of 4 cents per line; for p time. and R reuta per line for three times. • 'early advertisers mast confine Ihrrir advertising to 1r own business. Agencies fir , ottiers. sale of Heal de. ke...tre not Included In businessailverthements. IRON W . EACLE IRON WORKS. Tamaqua, Schuylkill County, Pa. HENRY svx la Ens, rt•PActrally in. Ices the ettentien of the, blisinesi corn nunity, and especially to, the propde• of Coal Mines. Bolling, Grist and vor Milli and the Managers of Railroads, .arks. at Taut Nue. • in 4 one of the oldest pri, ettcel Machinists in the ,oly of rtehuylkill, and haring always made It his trenlar business and daily duty to study the different 'presented by different Mechanics, to facilitate Hoisting, Breaking and Shipping of Coal In the An. rug., Coal 'Regions of Pennsylvania, he consequently !tors himself that ho Is as well prepared to construct d MOO with accuracy. Stearn Engines of any power, note of any capacity, Coal Breakers of every descrip• n. and all kinds of Clearing for Rolling, Grist and Saw iif, and also, Railroad Castings; as any othevFoundry Machine Shoplirm in the ,Authracite Coal Regions • •ennhylvania.• , WALTERA would OW call the attention of Coal ;atom to his newly Improved Coal Breaker, now in ; , at the Coal Mines of 3lesses. George Wiggan & Son, d Messrs. Shoemakei & Mediar,Tatnanus. The roll are 1,2 Inches In dianMtrr. cords initial': teeth, 3 a elf Inctuyapart. Thr additionfor improvement fro old plan is ht ILO Insertion ont Comb underneath on as to prevent tini Cosi from running 'qugh the rollors until It Is bullion into an uniform ..ahcut 194 inches square. It Makes the best kind ~ t ere Coal, and Inakes, also, leis dirt than any other 11111...Aker now in use. _ . torsona dnaluttua of putting up 'Weaken" of the kind Invited to send up their orders. which will he prompt attended tn. thders ot evoty kit d thankfully ro ved. - It cAtioNABLE."ta, 'a Inagua, Jauttary 8,'59 2:/.1 TAMAQ.UA.IRON WORKS. • Carter & Fbunders, Naehinisis. lkdler mut Machinists' Tool, Maters Inuit:Ur Builders: • The subscribes' , ere now prepared to Jetlire. drders for all kinds, of dist lowly :slalom' and machinery- for collieries, last furnaces, mills, dc. Extensive fa• Allies and practical experience in the .tat them in taking the largest contracts prices. Irtleular ittentlon Is called to hen!' & Allen's New le Patent Winding Machinery. by which the Slopes ~haft rope or chains run on thti top of both drums In , üble ways. - "! • Thin arrangement, It Is cnntidently believed, will ease hr wear and tear of ropes or chains, the price of the _ . , , rhinery in lIc Y years; and for fast winding s .simplirltr r,Mstructlon and durability, it cannot tat altrpasaed.f e ibm recommend the new car wiled, invented by .11r.1 trieu 11. Allen. This wheel can only be bad at our', .k.c. ;mid ha+ stood the teat of the several severe win-1 past. triurr phantly ; not a single, wheel havitrbeplo4 ton since its introduction. We are now plaring It the ears or some of the prlnelluirl Railroad Corupa-! to th o ,notry. e kreuld alliartill the attention of the pubUe to the; tslua Shop,eettneeted with the above worlucandi fitly rreetell for the manufacture of Italimed. Drily ; Lrla Care and Trucks; and furnished with all The ja-kt, impr,vetnentx. so that they are thus enabled to ex.' to work,much cheaper and with more dekpatch thant' •thfore. •_ • • Fl _ ._. II work gunranteiqt. `Pereons' wanting anything ln, Ilue would ..lo well to give us a cull. . ' • i CAltTElek ALLEN. ; 17- • --4 April 24, ',ifi vrj.. NOR & MACHINE iso, Carboni Sc huy 'kill Co., SH O P, , :' 0..‘, T. H. IV INT ERSTE EN announp-f his readiness, from the complete ottlAli Cate above named oeiabllhbuieut.to sup., ly all,ortlora.itt bls lino of business— t ieb, as for Steam Enghtei,ltallrrind amt.' ps, Con I Breakers, car lags and .11achinri . ~very pattern. lie warrants hie well to give sang ion, aud accordingly solicits patronage at home anti and • ' Jau. 27,..067 44y 'UNDRY AND MACHINg SHOP, .t Steam Car Factory,c. NOTlCF..—Thebusine4cf thelitte fin* SNYDER & "MILNES. will bilEcontln;.' ?ti by the suhsctiber in all its, vitriol:` ranches of Steam Eitglne building. Troll Ander, untnufactilrer _nf nil kinds c 4 iry, for Rolling Mills, Blastlnfrbaces, Railroad, :c.. .le. Ile will also continue the business of 311 U! Selling the celebrated Pine FaisESt IVltile.Ash and and .8/Wm Crins Red Ash Coals, being sole proprie' these Collieries. 01:0110E W. SNYDER. tory 21.1867 3-ti fi ALTO ROLLINC MILL. 1:; Subscribers beg leave to en; ,once to their Mende and the pubitm merally,thit their new Rolling Mill id do Alto is now' rompiete. and In fult "oration, and thaftheyt are prepared td of various pattirno, weiOling from 22 to, Ilso,differegt.sises of liat,square au4 merrha tam' bar Iron. o-r. For rails or bar iron are respectfully solieltodi Rill m..et with prompt attentipn if left elttfer, at Rollin ; MILL Bright k Lereh'e Hardware: re ktreet, or at their office, N.ll. Corner of Centel irk..t t reel s. 241 story: 11AYWOOO,LEE E C 0.,% 0. 1. 'LI ' Lt f OPERATORS & MINERS., nicer OPE R ATO RS orks• The *abac k iher reapeetfully iuilte Itention of the bualneva community to la Roller Works.ou Railroad stria.t.hei. )W the Paastwiger Derot, Fa 4 ...whelp hela-prepared to nianufarturs 1101LICIIS OF EVER DEL , CRIFTION, Statka, Alr Stael:s. tlaaninetera.Drlll &e. Bolters on hand. ~; ~z•tpnictleal meclM air and haying for yearsdpiote;i ~ a ticeiy to this branch of the business. be flat. hhawif that Work done at his establiahMent will ,ti-factim to all who may 'favor him with a ra11.4: itluals and ComrinieN will find It greatly to their Od- Te to a [ ' Amine his work before engaging elsewherit. '1,'57 474 f I JOHN T. -NOBLE.i. MEADOWIRQN WORKS., Itrive W. Halation respectfully] Isfortns the noble., that he is now solo* 7nprietor of the neareeldeadow Iron ri; team Wt.Wks, and is fully prepared tit tnanntirtrire, at this establiNhmenr,' , ;n4 41 1” , of , 00.ry ',Ste; l'utnpe; Railroad and brit[ and every other ‘Lescriptisti 'of Iron and Ilraq , suitable fol the Beal mining or other bit duelow ho most r•rtu'lt6 l l , rtnlb. Also, Blowing Cy hwerg plant' Ftirmwell vid Machine work In general. .5 'pairing of all kiiids done with neatness and deepatch le lowest prie.is. All work furnished by them war. ed to perform AWL They sronid solicit thecustom •e who mar witit articles% 111.41.11 We in this ricinite orders will meet with Immediate and prompt atteti: .wer Nfeatloap. January 1: LAND gR9N,r . R. R. ill :;I;liS.Cltl Ilk:11E. are now' fulit, rcpartl to furnish. at the Ashland Engines and I, pd capacity, forminlnc and othlr _,;urpo,teri, Coal Ilreakers et erne} grnat9l dae„t.ogether with mating& and for g i ng , doveriptlone. Coal and Drift Calla of all. alias • it fns, iarvi Truck and Horse Cara,—alifurntskid ,h.iricat notice. The aubserlberx flatter them- that, i uvula Orli is of or)"member of the trin Id q , •II !deck ink, they Rill be able to 'furnish hat will compare favorably with...any In thr.fte -411 , irdera directed to L. P.Gatitiza d Dada.. Xiih county, receive prompt attin. L. P. GARNER. DLI CII A F. 4 (I.AR.NErti JOSEPII .19 laid, liar 10,'51' DEHAVEN'S IRO N WORKS, Miners*lle., THE Subserliter is prepared to tiNako • facture STEAM ENGINES of any power, 'uahpeoteny eapaci ty,an d Coal Brea kin. every description; as well as evety ther, kind of maehinery.used In Mints, ices, Rolling Mills. Saw 31$11s.4te. , aeilities possessed for marinfarturlng. arid lqvvOenence lit the luts:teas. worklean bt.tarn4d a .I• •tahlivhinent, at the yery lowastpriees,ldd parlor l 'lrons of patting up machineryor any klnd, Ited to call and e.satnlne patterns and bweome tie ol with priers bellow eon tract log elsewhere. .3 •s of °eery kind are aolletted, and strict IllyOUtkrn ',leen to theirprompt eserution MATEPEr -swills, December IVILLIAM DE413.4f SHINOTON IRON WORKS. Pottsville, ra.. • 1108.4 JAB WREN respectfully Invite to attention of the Moshe-es eorom tin icy o their New ila , hitie Fiwp and Foundry vete , ' between Coal and iMinnatistretts. id frootina on Nnewealou street. where __ to execute all orders for machinery ill ron. such as Steam EnGines,all Moils of Optic ,r it Ali:ix Mill s, Grist and Saw Mllls,-Eingle and art i n G Pumps, Coal Breakers, Drift Care, all kiwi/ ilroal flutings, such as Chaim for Flat and ? Roll; . Switcheil.Ae.; all kinds of cast and wrought In* u„inft practical merhanies. and, having made ~I Inds of the float Region their stndy for year', 1.1 a 1. or Machinery I n their Hoe of bestowal. they .11,,0ns dyes that. work done at their establishment Ir6ll . satisfaction to all who may honor th'eln wlthji )r I Ira thankfully received and P r°)4t i , e x+ ~.on the most reasonable terms. 4 T IAA WICEN, .I,4MES .131,ISI3D: . EVERY, SATURDAY MORNING, BY BENJAMIN - BANNAN,IOTTSLLE, - §oIItYLK UNTY; ' PENNSYLVANIA;..: . XXXV, MEDICINAL. EST ESTABLISHED DRUG STODE IN THE COUNTY. !`sle OF THE GOLDEN EACLE," Centre 8 The estenaisci bus' ors* ~bathisestablishment in 'sines at all tints a lash supply of the purest and 'best DRCOS. IMMUNE/I T Ottrisloste. . The proprieiors: the mentor beton a kirwgaikt. , of thirty yea re expOl• 'erire. 'Are tbeit'p axon's! littenclanee at til times. Pple ular atten tion pal to Physicians' Prescript lona. I ' BTSPE.PSTA, DISEiSE OF THE . KIDNEYS, LIVER COMPLAINT, /L -. WE NES S OF ANY 'KIN > . FEVER AND A G UE , CE • II 1 - • '..LIVERYI I F.A RM ER' AND -EVERY ; - vAgiLrbu its peculiar Ilitters,compounded ao cording to some favorite recipe, handed down from father to,son. perliaps. The principle thgt a tonic stimulant!' necessary in every houae.is undisputed, yet, being eons• pounded by unskillful hands, often contains elements both incompatible and ineonidstent—trometimesporative. ly hurtful. We here offer to the public. Ina: highly con- Centrated form,' what will exactly supply this want, pre pared upon scientific principles. compounded of simples, acting In harm ny,yet each fulfilling its own remedial oMce. ' To rift Purist JAW Is here offered.ln a conientent form, Yet perfectly fe. on !natant. which, acting upon the circulation. rata the action of the system to the stand ard of health. e pecially after any debilitating attack of ~.. e disease;after d pressinn from beat, or any local or acci dental cause; tiSt Anti•Spasvantliv. which. with a general • stimulant noweir.acte with a peculiar influence upon the ' nervous systeml. calming nervous irritation.when taken . propstly, withbVt the least tendency to the brain; and without that d stressing reaction which is the bane ot , most tonics---eften causing tooreinjUry Ulan theoriginal disease., .: ,As A Toxic. moderately and permanentlyexaltingthe energies of all firte of the frame, producing nfetssarity Y , healthy Increase of the action of the 'futons etiene, chemleally changing the acidity of the stomach, and act ing normally upon the liver in regulating permanently the billiery secretions. ' NOTig FL—Whoever expects toted tidos beverige will be disappointed; but to the sick. weak and low-spirited. It will prove a grateful aromatic cordial,possessed of ?angular remedial properties. Caution....Th r ,„trreat popularity of this delightful • Aroma has Inditted many Imitations.which the public should gUaild against purchasing. Be not persuaded to .buy soy !hitt - R . BW until you bare given POLADATZ'SIIOI. LAND BITTERN a fair trial. One bottle will convince you bow infinitely 'superior it is to all these imitations. •Atif-Sold 'tit per bottle, or six lxkles for $5, by the . - SOLE PROPRIETORS, ~ .BENJAMIN PACE, JR. &CO. KAR . OINICTOI4I2“I plprinareansts anb Cbaniste, PITTSBURG, PA'. • ' For ante In'Thlladelphla by the agent..—TlolTmane& Dlorwig. office: of the Democrat; John Johns, Bare street; Dyott A Sons, In North Second street. Also, In Reading. by Bitter & Co.; Lancaster:by John F.. Long I Co.; Pottsville, John G. Brown. J. C. C. Hughes and C. W. Ept Ing ;1 Tamaq us, by E. J. Fry; K. Barna, and SchnyPtill Haven. by Dl.. B. CM :heater. November. 27. 'fiFt ;a. • t First Edition of 10.000 sold-in 6 Weeks. ENTITLID "BOYHOOD'S PERILS MANHOOD'S CURSE." PUBLISHED BY DR. S. PANCOAST, 816 *ling! Garden- Strect,_Philadelphia, Pa., ' Aid for sale by alettooksellers. • This it a bnil of 225 Pagve.l2nto., bound In eloth, with NINE LITII9GRAPIIIC PLATES, and intended for Parents, Guardians and Young llen. Every young man. .that wish. 4 to m , Intiln his heatth and ; maa/sood.• and have a healthy 7, try, eny. should read this bond. Soule of the statements are really asthunding and' have never be fore appeared in print. Price El. By mail $1,1f4 Dow in Frees, and Ready for Delivery in' a Few Days.. , .A Great Work for the Lailiesi • hr the mute Author, entitled LADIES' MEDICAL GUIDE, AND MARRIAGE FRIEND. ' This la a work of nearly 600 pages. beautifully,honnd In cloth. and contains over lOU SPLIINDID and Customs; ENGRAVINGS. 111. gives a complete description of the; structure and function of the reproduetive organs of the female. showing how married ladies may ,have nr avoid large fatnille Also. a complete history ot Ilermiptiro ditistai with edrious Plates : showing both sexes In ono. ' ItAsiso Olin advice to Young Ladles in selecting a • husband. pointing out the cause of so much Unhappi ness after marriage, and the Influence It exerts on the offspring. The work also gives the't%mptoms and treatment of all female diieases, so that every female may be her own Physician. ' • • The last chapter is devoted to the TOILET. giving the receipts for cOnnotirs at present lo one by the nobility of Fnuire.England mud Rue/114,F0r beautifying the skin, hair, teeth, and for relapsing fool and preserving a sweet breath. They have been obtained at great ex pense. „ Price, $1.60. By mail. $1,75. or eight additional letter stamps. SOW copies have already been ordered. Those :lilting a copy of the first edition should send their or dere without delay. For:complete description of the work see Prospectus, welch will be meet on receipt of one letter statnp. , , Agents Wanted in every town In the Union. Fob. 26, '69 •Sly• i' 'THE.LIVER , 'I IT N',l G. QRAT O I R ! •.-.PfI.P.PAREIII - ItY C tlit. SANIIFORD. COmpounded Entirely From GUNS, ' IS one of the. best PURGATIVE and LIYEIt medicines now before the pidle - . that acts as a frithortic, easier, milder, an d moreeffect nal t hen any other medicine kneed. It is not only a COMartfc. but . a Liver remedy. acting first on the Liter to eject itimor bid matter, then on the stomach and boivels to Miry off that reatter,thwe accomplishing two purposes effectu ally, without any of the painful feelings experienced In , the operations of most CA hartica. It strengthens ,the system at the same time that It purges , it; and when taken daily in moderns, do • ves, will streugthetraud build it op with unusual reryldity. . The VI ver is one et the principal regulators ..of the human body ;.and . when it perfottnsits func tions well. the IkTers of the' system are fulli.de voloped. ,The Stemma I% almost entirely dependent on the healthy action ot the Lacer for the proper performance of its forte- lions; when the stotilach is at fault, the' bowels area., at mutt, and the • whole system linnets .in rouse- queues of one organ--tbe 1 Liver—hiving ceased sal.(] do its duty. For the die. .erica of that organ, one of . the proprietors has made it his study. In a. practlergli of more then ,t) years, to . I find some remedy where with with to counteract the 1 many derangements toie'pa which it it liable. To prove that ibis renottelf dy is at last found. any , persort,troulded with Lll ver Complaint, in any of Its forms, has bu11.,4.;... to 'rya bottle, and couch.- ti n is certain. These Gums remove AGO morbid or bad mattetfristn the system. supplying' in their places healthy flow of. Idle, invigorating the's, strenneh,•eatising food to dtieet well, purifying fla blood, giving tope and health to the whole ma p chinery, removing the causeof the disease—effort. frig a radical cure. WI tows attacks are en red,Z . and;ashor ft better. preens. red, by the occasional ,1/14 of the Liver laavlgo. eater. ' hal . tine lose after eating is suf icient. to relieve the stomach and prevent the• food from rising and sour in Only one dose taken 04 11 lore retiring, prevents Nightmare, • . O „ . nly one. dni.e taken t etral night, loosens the bowe l gently, and cures aneire,e. nets. Onedmettken ettereachN, meal will cure Dyspepsia: tra-One dose of two tets-Pw epoonfais will always re. Hee. Siek lie dad One bottle taken for ie." , male obstruction removes : the cause of the dineise,, .1 and makes a perfect Only one doeeltr otedl-Pta ately relieves Clmife. while One do" ^nen repeated 15 a sure rune for Choltra-1 Marna., and a preventive of ("Were. sta-Only One hottld 140 needed to throw out or thej system the effects of reed. , Irina after a long etch nets. WOnehottle taken for - en , - Jouadire removes all sal.: lowness or Unnatural cieleryl from the skin. One dote taken a "hestt thaeheforeeiting gives 11l gor to the aetite. nod 4 makes food Mtet well. I One dose ofte pp n :repeated on Chrenic o Porches; in its worst forms,w bi ie Betwri 'err east Bowel Comp/anti yield almost to 'the firs t done. One or two dote* cureat-r e „ tacks caused by Wasiak In chlldrent;thereia no surer ril ester, or speedier remeti in the world. as It nrerrm e , fear. - ' . CrarA few bottles curegil Ilropsy, by exciting , th absorbents. We take pleasure in re-14 commendint (biomedicine saa preventive tier Fero and Ague. Mill Peter, and all Fevers of a Bilinustn Tape.' at operates with certainty. and thousands"' amt willing to testify twit* wonderful vltture. All who kW it are girist their unanimous tatistolvy its ate Pror. Is3l-Nix water in the etnuTh wish the Invigorator, and twatiose Goa Ingelh•r. - - , • Tat LIVER nivzootaTot • la a Scionfille Medical Dirrovery; and is dolly working cures.altanst toogrnat tote - tiers. rarre,lll. If by mir Or, erm the On dap giving' sod *Admit num* than onntinteht In requited 10 tors any kind of Liver Complaißt. from' the worst Attnictico nt ity.,p,p4l4 to common lleaducto, all of Intact are the weak' of w cased Lira. • Pelee. it per bottle. DR. SAl.tYDßD,l'roprletor, 4 743 Broadway. New York 44rItetalls4 by all Drogalste. $Ol In Pottsville FIENRY SAT[ OR and In Teneafina, by E. J. FRY. June ' . • EMI i . • . . • , • - -:. ~,,.,i _. ~ ~ . . .. . 1 ,- , I T: y-.,„-. . . , . _ , . . . . , '. , : '. .: . \-%, ,•,. Li .4.. . . „. ' 1 It''''-''''''," „I ::, ,-,, -.. . . .°, • - , ~ „ . . • ' ' • t . , ' - ,-,',:,- - .:„. kk i v ''L` . -, W,„ g.e.„ „ .:.-, - , • . ~,,,,. '•= r , ,_ . 0 .. , . ~ „ ~ . , , , , _. , . i , ~, '•, -. '., s o 0 I. WI . a k i I I 11 10 ' I: - ' - --: • -••-- • . . . - - . 411 P' . , : ' . , , 'f . • - (-z: ' ' lA. ': 1 ' ; -. ' ' ,',., '... A . • * .:`,. a ' " . '* . ', . '' ',4' , 7 iL ` . , 1 . . . - •- . , ' , _.• ~„ - - .' , '' 4 r,.. ..-: . '' '. ..l ''. ' 1 i ':,'- - . ' r r , ' ... '. -- i t. ' ' ~.:- ~•''t= . ;, ; - ... , ~ , - •., .-,- - -.. : ~ i ',' 1 , f -. rm.: • ~. . , , ~,... . . ~ . , ~. . „ , II '' . TI , „ , _ 2iiaf f :/k , ' rl i, ' . GENER . AAA -. , .. . . , ' N IA,. ', - i 1 4: y .... ,„.. I • i A I I l i • , ''',.* 1.. -7 -.. • ' ''‘ '' ' . • • -' . ' 1 • , I TRACI/ TOO TO MOOS THY BOWLS OF Mt I LIKTR I AND BIM MIT FROM TRIF aATßlViiitor mouswassoicTALl THIGH III.L curie air:said TO inne 'aorta AND BMW= ALL MITIMMI..ko CU usx-41.3111 11.111ASIIiSDKJ . s to INT . EPPING •., , , y '!" . .g . I , IIOLESALI3 ANDIILF.D,.P.IL careensisstesszci. 31gorizjliast. , 8: ILcorner Cpates and NorVegian Sta.. ' • • , POTTSVILLE. •-: ' . Jlk . PERROT'S Celebrated selir ter. shJse Saner? , Fonstantly Ca bawd..' s March 5.'59 . 10- .tare snort The free admissions of all Natione.its Well as the vet , dirt of the leading ilorpitala of the Old and New World. stamp this powerful remedial agent ari the greatest heal ing preparation ever m ade known to bu ff ering man. Its evorraxriva DCALITMO are more than vtaavv.tors, thee. the external orifices of the skin, invhillile to the naked eye, it reaches the seat of the intern*l disease; and in ali external itrectious Its anti-Inflammatory and healing virtues surpus any thta g else on remit. and Is Nature's great filly.l e • . t . Erysipelas and Salt nem Are two of the most emotion and virOlent ditorders pre valent on this continent, to these thetOinttnent is espe cially siutagonistie. Its ..rodus cperanHe' learnt to med icate the venom and then complete the cure. , ; ! lad Legs,. Old Sores; and Ulcers. CAM ' S of many yeira standing t harhave pertinaciously refused to yield to aoy otbir remedyr treatment, have invariably succumbed to a few appli Mee of this Pow erfulnngent. . f ' Eraptioits ea the Skin; Anteing from a bad state oi•the blood r chronic disease, ere eradicated and,. clear cad tran,l prent suffice re- : gained by the restorative action of t rle.Ointment. it surmises many of the cosmetics and other toilet ,appli ances $n Its power to dispel 'rashes mid Other disligure mente of the face. ! I ' Piles and Fist*. • •- • Every form and feature of these prevalent and stub. born disorders Is eradicated locally • d null rely .by the use of, thi. emolient ; warm tomentat one should precede its' application. Its healing qualitie will be found to bit thorough and Invariable. . • Both !the Ointment and Pill+ ihmtld •be need in ! f . Ahe Allotting rase*: Pontoon, ! ' Rheumatism, lore Throats. Burn*, Ringworm, Soren of all kinds, „Chap ed Hands, Salt Rheum, sprains. ! Cbilbj alga, . Scuds: - - Stiff Jointe r ' Fistu a,t Skin Diseases, etter; , Gout • • Swelled Glands, ; leers, Lumtiagrl, ... Sore Legs, . enereal Sores, Steroidal Erupt's.Sore *caste, oun 41t of all Pilesi Sore Heads. ' - - kinds. t ' CV - Coalition SW...None are gentl e unless thewords "lloihwag, Nam York and !Ander.," are discernible as i water-mare in every lent of the k of directions armed each pot or box:. the LUDO ybe !plainly seen by 41ding. the lad to the light. A handsome reward will be given to any one rendering a eh information as r t , ! may teed to the detection of any part or parties coon. torfelting the medicines er vending he mane, knowing. yherii to be spurious, . -. • . : • •,,,I;told at the nianufltctoriee of P , fessor Hottowsr, • SO 31•Idon Lane, New York. and by ail respectable Drug gist and Dealers in Medicine, the United ce Slat nti. es and and the civilized world, in pole at 26 cents, ES $1 each. /There lea conelderable saving ger 4ses. . N.lll.—Dieeetione for the guidance disorder are arlsed to each pot. 1 June 12, '4B •••'' • [Mow] IA BEAUTIFUL , i l' , • • OF 1 , RICA . CiifiESIFITIiiiII 0 . Compleiely Preserved . TO, THE. GREATEST ACE. A ND WHO ' thit is GREAT EST would not Li have It restored to former eglor: or bald, but would have the growth restored, ori n ubled with dand ruff and itching but would have it oved, or troubled with scrofula. 'scald bead, or other er ptions, but would be gored . or with scal d head-ache, (nedraigia) but would be cured. It 'nlllllso remove all pien'plea from; the Aim and skin. Prof:Wood's hair Itestumt ve will do all this, see circular and the following. • i • Aux Aaaoa , N eember 5, 11 , 56. P,nor. 0. J. Woon—Dear Sirt'l hive beard much said of the wonderful effects of your flair - Restorative, but baiting been eo often cheated by qukekery and quack noatrums, hair dyes, - 11.e, I was dispelsed to place your ilestorat , ve in Ito same eategory wit if the thothandatid one loudly trumpeted quack retnedier, until I met you in Lawrence county'some months shire; When you gate cuOuch assurance as Induced the trial of your Rester, 'raffia in my family,-11rst by my good witeorbose hair had become very thin and 'entirelyl white, and before exhausting one of your large bottles her hair was re* tared nearly ,to its original beautiful browit color, and hadthickened and become beautiful and glossy upon, . 1 and entirely 'over the head; she cantle ors to use it. not sitilly because of its beautifying effects upon the hair, but because of its healthful influencelupon the hied aitd i mind. Others of my family and friends are using your Reidonutive, with the happiest effete; therefore; my skepticism and doubts in retereuee to its character and value are entirely removed; inctl and de most cor dially and confidently recommend 1 use by all who. ',Meld have their hair restored from white , or gray (by ss re eon of Pickue orage .) to original color *and beauty, = I. and by all young persons who woof. have their hair beautiful and giosey. Very truly and gratefuli young, pomoN MANN. . , . • . __ :. • arum Woos:—lt Wlll , a bog timnafter Low you at Il infield before I got the.bottle of RtistOtatWe for which y u gave ; me an order upon your 'agent in Detroit, and et ten,l got it we concluded to try on Mrs. Mann's h Ir, as the surest test bf Its p4Wei% It has done • ill 1 that yeti assured me It . would do; and others of my laically and friends, hiving witnessed its effects, are now 'oiling and recommending Ito use TO others as entitled to the highest roushierat lon you claim for it. , Again, very respectfully and truly yours, . • . . , 8 I.OItON MANN. . . CAILLtta. i June ^_8,1852:- I have used Prof. 0. J; Wood's Us r Restorative, and are admired its wanderfcil..eff4ts: My hair was be mil ng. - its I thought; prematurely y, but by Le use Cif his itratorative it has resumed itioriginal color, and, 1 have no dont t, permanently so. B. BRESSE, •eioSertat , r, ti. S. 0. .1. WOOD A CO_ proprietors, 12 BroadwaY, New York., (In the great. N. TIJVIre itaillog, Establishment,) Indite Market sta.. 81. Loulailicul And sold by all good Dr ggists. March 12,!•59 'l. • 11.3 t MEDICIN DR. ' COOGSWELL'S NEW MEDICAL SALT! ~For Infispaninstaiy Dlisigles Only. ew Medical Salt: New Medkal Salt! .-; IT IS NOT A CUIIE-ALL' 1 ' AM`For Inflammatory Dii - eases Only. aspICAL SALT, instead of being remedy for all il i a, R. COGGSiVELL'SINEW MED control -orer but one ill, has bat one. aim, and ae- Omplishes but one; thing, to wit: a enutsi INFLAIIIIIAIO. rT DIMUIL Whatt!,ir be lit form or lity, whether in the head, throat, Abdomen. extrema " or akin. ' 4 l. SA .1. STEW 1111i,DICAL peeu, 111 excellence in that arilheut the ore deem loss of bind and strength, It effectually urea inflammatory Pima:es. (no othem) by producing a equilibrium °fall the fluids In the body, the aunt o lthleh le. the sole p.t eel of lodanuoal lon. NOTICE TO ,INVA IDS !!--The followineforms ahl kb the lantesianced folds ate 'name, and many not here mentioned: Hutt have more or lid ,1C. , . fever or pain, are as easily ea ued by the NEW HEDICAL SALT, as tire is eating 'shed .by water. to wit : Brain Fever, Headache, liush.o Blood to the Head end Heart, Fits, Inflamed eyes. eats, nose, lunge and firer. Neuralgia, Spinal affeetione, Eryalpelas, Bronchi. tis, Pleurisy, Asthma, Coughs, Dyspispida.'Teneresi Mb* ashes, Rheumatism, float, Scrofula, od all Itching and tither cutaneous eruptions. DR. COGGSWELL'S.VEW MED ICALr SALT exerts. like the va ine matter, an ex • traordinary in fl uence beer the veins and arteries, result. fangin a gradual decline of Intiam ion as indicated by the pulse, whirl' won resumes its tiatunl state, u the heat pain and fever disappear. . , R. COGGSWELL'S . ICAL SALT ibnar just what azwatts orders chronic paeltaie. — T FOof Ceaticrinntaht and directions ree circular. D. C. TAYLOR A CO, Gen. Ages:A *2 Douica- rAi/ N. B.—Agents wanted in every Cify.Town and Village. D R.! CO aGrSW ELL'S; NEW MED . Lek...3.41419s for sale In Pottsville, by C. W EP. TING: to .11inersville,'by H. W. - Pitgi‘Nri'; In Ntill • Phila. delphily hp D. W. DODSON: in Port Carbon. by 11. SHI36 17.8: in St.Clairott to 3Addleport, by J.R. Polars; in Taw-imam. by RILIGAN di Fos. and by all t,.; sp. ctsOli Drnighrts wherever the ••.iiivesst." la read As it is net a patentinedielne, Nil the prescription of eminent phyalcivn, no one eh aid fall to try the NEW SIEVICAI. SALT. • - •••• February - ii, ' 64y —_ -- TRULY MAGICAL In Paine! REFERENCES can b given tajadi irldnale where the relief and nre of l'ains Inter 'balls and externally hare been ter magical.l4 11011. GAN'S MAGIC DAbM. and who s they would not be without It if it cost Fire Dollar* a bOftle. Direetionsite eompany each bottle: No fluidly azontlnted with its value will be without it. They might taro ten times the cost and a greet dealer pin and setterinr. For Cabo by .1. 1101tGaN;Thirri,streel; Pelerrtife. 411.25 and 50 cents a bottle; led IP and 81 per dozen.. January 22. '6o' ism • • PREEIP,,VE Y9tIR;II:EkT.H.I im la. D. 11. DODSON Ce l e b rated; le 'Pica Pasts for r leansiqu. beautifying. and. pruserviny the TEEM, stands tuitivaied as douti-, fare, and is undoubtedly the fheitlertkle or the kind, ever offered.- To bf had of the proprior, or of jleufy , tyke, Dieitglet. • . „ - Pottsville. July 81. lit -ly APER ieuwit ' • . ,- Ic3A.TENT P MACHIN EIIYI ADE Paper nogit, to hold from I to 20 po AMU, %rib oremilthin gloand °thin, for *alp by ' .... 11.114111f3=8. . f _. -C . ogrostreet.Pettlrille. N4rirbst 8,76 tNe.l5 . SAT URDAN • MORNING, MARCH 19, 1859. M . ,1 NUFACTURES. It tt Mine lit to the Iled«GoOd Needlie T . OH • ENGLISH VO.'S "Patent I Helix filled Eyed Needles,. deddedly the best to the mark et, of different sizes, from fie. to to 12. always to be he 3 wholesale and-retell, et- . ..11:Nd E NAN'S, . PetisvEht Jamie', 30,14 . - - -' ? ' 'b- . - WILLIAMSPORT PLANING MILL, - •uswisx Tax- . ••, Snnbnry & Erie Itailroaflaritithe Canal; , • (Oppuaits the Furnace, Williamsport, Penna.) ' GEO.I-S."•BAjgGER & 'CO., Whole elle aid Retail Osilersand Matin%ctizrers of whit* Ind yellow One flooring boards,saaholoors, blinds,shut. (Cr,, siding{ wood Inn uldinalt, to. Jig and scroll sawing, fancy and Wain. All descriptions of t inning and planing dune WithlWOMPtriall, and in the best manner. • Tebrietryi2T, - • . • • NOTICE. • • __ • • To Coal Operators sad tialittytalll_Co . sm. • ty Merchants. MOI L ING 'TOBACCO, by Steam S - power-flOOlbs a day, at Ilamburg. Smoking Tobac• eo and Sept Manufactory, on hand and ready fir tale. 200 barrels sweet scented Smoking Tobacco. 200,000 lialf Straub& Sevin. 200,000 SEtes,Spanlids Regan. • 100,000 Seed and Tatra &gars: ' Orders thankfully rectdvad and.Vromptly attended to. Tarsus easy, MAUI ANN MOTEL Hamburg, Berks County, Pa. J.E4AIV7IftrtiMILIABO. TILE subscriber is prepared, et • his old stand, to thrash - all' kinda of Materials hi his lib., ter bundle purposes-0131u am' namental. j Ile Inv, particular sites:aim the tomb 'Atones a Monumentbofbiami atacture. !Murals had in every varlet! style, and WM cum( favorably, ir beard: where. nodal* offer, June b, 1311 23-1 y) MAUCH - CHUNK - • .Wire Appelola° (try, M1.145.12ear,31 3 / 4 seramtol, dtrOita.; .11an taut later of Wire Bope, lb r inatned phmes,shafto, slopes, &e.owould inform the public that be is now pir pared to melte . • /AL • KI.AiLS, LENCITOS /ND SIZES 01P FLAT .A.ND BOVA D SOPA . 0 At the shoal, st notice , of superior quality , and on the most liberal! terms at his Wirt, Rope Factory., ' • ' •AlessoM C kusalte Carbon C0...Pi.• Referenca can ha made to Messrs. E. A: Douglas, N. D. , Cortrlghta;id A.ll. B ro a dhead , thitleh Chunk; , to N. Patterson, ninmlt 11111. to &harpy, Ledienring & Co' Tll wortillusee county, Pa., and intact . nearly all amok. stators] n t ie Region who hare been using his ropes. August 14.'tR [August 8.'37 32,17] 33.' • MINERS' S AFETY ,LAMPS. iStiperlow '' r rHE iSUIBSCRIBEP,' has Just re: p calve from New Castle;Epgiand, a lot of Davy's Safety Wor king Lamps, made tinder the inspection of the - ,Englielt Government Agent. of the best .quality wire gauze, Also, Gauze Diners made ready for use, for these Lamps: There are the best Safety Lamps ever in troduced into thisCounty,and irefarralewholesaleand retail at abput the coat of inOrior 'Lampe. Also; 'Wire Geese by tail yard, and Lamp Brushes by the dozen or eimtle. Alao.tbp,Clanney Lamp for-Dosser, and Mine Viewers. .Thie immtils covered with ailhiek Gins, and gives an inOreased light which Is of ImPortanre to Mine Viewers. 1 BENJ. DAKNAN. - ffirThese Lampe can be put into a box 511ed.with ex plosive gas; and moved rapidly backwards and forwardi without any covering, and will not explode. August 5,'67 . _ - APEX! STOCK OP BOOTS AND BKOES, Woo seals and Retail. DANIELi SCHER'S B desires to call the attt n• • Mon of thetublie to hisl/14 _ ' extensive aSsoriment of Boots and Shoes. MSOII - des his own A b r . . .. 4 " Inspection. especially 4 adapted tohe Coal Re- 4 , 14`• gion. and offered fovea%. '44.-r...c— -at his Storti On CENTRII STREET, Marra Ind opposite the Public School Ho**. Be has on band a well as stock of Miners' Bon's and Shoes, Men'a and Boys' Calf:Coat and Kip Boots and Brogans of every_deseriptioa: Women% Misses' and Children's Gaiter Boots. Heeled Button Gal tare, Half (latter' and Lasting linitina.pf every color; Women's, ktisses' and Children's W Ida n d Goat Skin Laee Boots, Buskins. Ties and Slippers. klen's Patent Con. gross Bo,tti4 Also an neeortmenrof Felix A Co.'s Read. log We/km.l All of which will be sold at unusually low prices. Pailienlar attention given to all kludge! mann facto red and customer ' , Work and repairing. AIM on hand, aSn assortment of Trunks, Tallies and Carpet Bags. Pottsville, June 19.'501 2fetf .y taking the lat. paqintoin fifty HEAD J..L. INENNIC'S .MOROCCO . FACTORY. Andliesther and Shoe-131ndimEitore. Raitracid. reel, Wows •• 1 - POTTf Hi reepeethely inform hid old .enisterners, a the public gesemlly,tl eontinties to mat Pieture ALL KINDS MOlOVCWKids,Btial French liereeen, Unbend Book Medial Pink Lining and Real of all anima: 11. has so on hantEzt general sorttnent of all kinds LEATHER:Oak taut and Red Sole Lean City ICtilf hkins. Leather far belts, and good Bucket testbeefor pumps, and an extensive variety of Lasts. Threads, Rails, Pegs. Clamps. /le. NI kinds of skins. Sheep, Coat. Deer, de.; also. Sumer taken in exchange for leather,at the highest trAtiiiit; Mires. or paid for In eats. .rottollln. July 10,'fiEL - E: T. zu Icn. . CAA& A. orsnairs. r.r. lIENDE. That Which has long been songhtior inPottsville; can now be bad by going to E. T. ELLRICH 4 COOl3 (sw:mon to B. 2'. Taylor.) • . Chem) Fuhinabli Clothing, Merchant •T;lor . Jug; and General Furnishing Stoio, Corner of Centre andliatuintatigo streets, where can be found the largest assortment of cloths, camimeres, vest logs, fdrnlithiug'goods, and ready-made clothing aver offered to the - citizens of Pottsville. width has been selected with groat Mae from the lar gest-homes In Philadelphia and New York. We • buy for each. and will sell for each, at the very lowest prices: .We desire to rill partisular attention tom:ten* tomer department, being all practical tailors, having lens experience In the drat housesof Paris. Philadelphia and Boston. we feel confident that our gar - Manta cannot be surpassed for neatness of idyls, beauty and Iltiby any houses inthe elUes: much less in Pottsville. Our fu Waling department Is supplied with all the latest styles of gentlemen's furnishing goods. Shirts made to order on scientific . principles, by one of the fird houses la Philadelphia. and warranted to et. • • " • iteMember the . plase--Cerwer of (mire and Ma lumtango reels. „May 29.18 MAT PAIN INC; PAPER HANCINC,4tO. • THE undersigned would respectfully anno • bee to the public that,he has' opened a Pala t !hop, In Noriegian sweet . next door to Smith's ' L i quor elm*, where be i s prepared to execute all Work I his line, tub as House sad Sign Painting. Glasing, laintag and Paper Hanging, on the 'shales; notice, an on-reasonable terms. Having workedva the business for a number. of years, be hopes terreeelie a share of , the public patrdnage. 111.1CLIAELELldi it Pottsville, April 17, 'A . 154 y i t t i EDUCED PRICEB. 'VP N•eziper Crh.stihrep. A HE subscriber has' a large lot of ire choice Patterns a • a Pa Dining ROOM/4 Chem. . tARE", ben, and PnblieSulldlogs,whleh ~.0. . * .„ . ':.`..t. ..„. he will sell stlivrestly reduced A... prices. The Stock embraces the ••• ti.w • • - _ latest are/broil esteemed Patterns. Paper as cheap as 5 cents* Pl t ee. Now is a time tbr Denial ni, for Paper Hangindiand Books at . D. BANISH'S theapjWharsale and Retail Paper and Book Snere, Sir-PAPER lIANGELS BDPPLIRD.VILItt DURAL Oetober sig, , sr i MUDEY 8 BOWEN, 1 House & Sign Palates. & Paper Usage ars. I AP. 'received New Styles Plain ned Decorative weta. ~, . ~,.., .. .. F. ; 'AY nB. GOLD WINDOW,i 'Via --....,--- SHADES, BOR LIEU, ie. ...u. Those wishing ... a handsome .9 . . - Parlor Paper Moeda see our ••u•,, 4+ , 1 Imp d Gold Papers. i Meyer* NIEW, lIIN p DIZIG and Mrs a better alert than those generally anufactured. j Pure White read. French Colored...Daly/led. and American•lanes, Preneh and Amerfrau Oft.. Varnishes. le. 4 Window Olamfie. tlinnr Seat, IbtlsvUie, 2 doors above America* arum Artritiroax . • ts4r, NEW MED- It otaluis to d04.n0 POTTSVILLE HOUSE; . JOHN, F,. KEINE% Proprietor, Guatraatrad t PorrsviLLE., Ph. 4; d r ^ SaKicod Stabling providad.—ES . November 20,14 , 1 4i. . • ,'WHITE HORSE :HOTEL:" - Varner e. 4 amfre read Nuhantotoga Stmts. Fbflnute. - JOseph ffi. reser, Proprietor. I ' Entertstifiliiintaandieetommedatione ' • 'of tbe beik kind, and every. atteodon twill be pild by die hod reed bus at.. ;tendante make guests and *Tell. p ars eomfortebb • , .•, August: 1; • PRICES REDUCED TO SUIT THE rams: • 'NATIONAL HOTEL,'' (bate "'WHITE SWAN.") • • ••• RUH l Strtet, above THIRD, •• • V The Proprietors of the above veil-known' estabibdr meat. Won Matilda' for the veryliberal patronage be. 'towed upon them the peat year. tyke this method ot forming their Mende and the public that they are prepared to aerommodate them If favored oith a call. Darlog the Winter monthelbeinante hair Wen' thet renovated, imprOvetnentenntde,andotheriaten• sive altered:ma in contemplation., „ • - We are determined to devote one elide attention to badman/Ind Litter ourselves..with. the eonviation that ire still, he Ade to give general taiiiithetkm, - iiesPgetrult/ young.. IithEALI grOVEtt, Yt!tee eked, diem 7,histki .O.V-TERSIP:--$1.25 Per day, - n.:--Vorril4ges willalway be in readieeta toenail , ileseengare icon.; baet Rat road Donets. , &8., rigladrirtie Per• - I JOIIN T. LANG. HINTING, &C: r ) DOI WIRE` SCREENS. _,'' WIRE COAL AND SLATE SCREENS. irOIIN KUR'rZ, (laterof and sic.; 41 , armor to Hem ft littatam) would respeetfistly aU the attention of, pennaleneaged In Os Coal BalliClONgs to hh .31anolhetory of WIRY. COAL :AND - ALATit saanana, COAL RIDDLI9,WI DE BROOMS. - te., at the old establishment. Anoolotuio, schoyminco., Miring been engaged In the business of Screen soak. leg Ibt upwards of twelve, yank!: I flatter myself that I can torn outs, stood work as is done anywhere In the county. and would refer to the quality of my work 10, tb. pest. ass guarsultas of whit It will be In the Mute, pledging myself that I will spare no pato, to mats-my work satisfactory to aUdrho may IFlve me a trial; * : j°ll:lr a.P wr w . n. z ESTERLI & /RICK, ' Ltaufsetnrers of Wire Coal Serum OU LDres respectfully call I the liten• -Wa.Dofvi• gunea engaged In ~,- 477 , theCoaltraeletotheir - _ . : •:•-• , • Coal screens of the .', , ...%..N......t \ 00 various Sigel/ .. They ,!.' ' . r . t - - have Increased Aril- ,` . , ~. ~....,-' ---- 74 i Mei for turning out , i ":-- .-. ._--.... ' l \ \ the bestof work with ' - - -- e-0 '- - ,...7f," -- Mau p, promptness and dta• ---_,. - - ..,- - - 4 - pitch. • Heel° g the • _ 4 .0 , "7: -...0. •,. ~. .t) .- most experienced to , ', hands In the State ' 1 _ __ . --. elissal; - - c-s --- • - •- 5 ' F'" . they can guarantee r all work done at their Factory. Repairing neatly and substantiaily dew at m , surtia 'Screen Bells,Coprbeeli,Edireway pings, Shafts. Gad geona, 4r.,.4te.. always on band. • • • '' ' All orders dlreeteil to the arm by mall or left at .1).1.. rst.wira hardware Store will moth* prompt attenUon. Pottsville, 11arrh.12,1,9 psly 27 J 11' MISCELLANEOUS. MAPS OF SCHUYLKILL COUNTY. xN portable form , backed,with sultable for mailing. Price 3 =lv. Yrs sahl br 41.BANNAN. TRAVELER'S GUISE. T • HE latest and best Traveler's Glide iDrona6ou'tne tinned State,. lust received sod for let EL BAN NAN'S , Cheap Book Sore MELODEONS , beautiful rich toned Five Octave MBLODICON. Rose Waradalario Aria for We etioap DANNAN'iI Book mud More. CLOVER SEED. THE highest market prices paid,far good dean Clov gee d at. • ottani*, Fab. b, ' S9 al &ed and ask Stem -FISHER'S MAP. A COPY of Ftsber's Large Rap of the Coat; Fleas. Wee 111 112, for sale at this otßre. These Slabs are scarce and but few copies can,be bad. - , . - Pottsville Jay. lfig!9 • • -: . 3-- t i - g l iV 3 r B ec l eiV 4 d E , S a S freish C a N ss l o S rt S me t n i t \ ot , nglish Bone and Wood Chessman of different styles, hen Wards mud Backgammon Boards, Dominoes, ke.-, A.so, Ague! on Chess. For sale at B. ildliti4llo3.llookand Stationary Store. BAGLEY'B,OOLO PEES. • ' TtiST received, a fresh assortment of ity these eetetrited GOLD PENS, at eattotiit sizes, with Cues for the-pocket or desk. - We wserant &tee poets, cud estbange them It the points come of Poe sale,,at B. BAN NAN'ff Wok sod Stetiowiry Store, • REPORTS 0 1 ml"r s a • o ng is 1. • ouse of Commons on the„ king of Coal /dines, and the causes of ie adepts In the' awe, Illustrated with au merans drawinp,a fiery vs able and Salta work. et, 2d, and :Id Reports cue sale at be Bookstore or the sub ',critter., B..BANNAN. Pottsville. Mitch 1 4,' , `. 8 ; 11. TO SCHOOL DIRECTORS. arms TO . TEACHBR,S--:4 Chrd Deegan I for up fa Schools. T H IS Card contains valuable hints to teachers and alma sebolars. and a copy dught • to bip bang up In every pabile sehool In the flaunty,: Prlceils cents each. Just published and for sale by Aug. 14,'58 XS] B. BANNA!.I. - 7 — MIEIAS•OE PIXTTSVILt.E. - THE SUUSPHIPtat has a tot of.the Views of Pottrrille. which is a heitutiful view of_ the location; scenery, lc., which he sit tho low rate 11,23 cents each, to close out the lot. They mein published at 411 50 each. Now is the time to procure is copy, as but few remain unsold. • B. EiNT • • . Mai M, '5B Bookseller and Stationer.i POTTBVILLE• ROLLIkill MILL. ta. 8 t.l.tiSettltiEßS are con. e : 1 11 1 stoutly manufaituring varkus Flies of Rails. weighing 22, 26, 28, 30,32 • and 40' pouoda per yard. Alsaterge Italia 'ot' , the most approved patterns, welithiug 46, 60,68 and 80 pounds per yard. From the experience of.thv past dee years. we feel A:made - et of making RAIN unsurpassed in quality by . aUytnill in the country. All ha/loess eommputratiose addreised to Messrs. TAILDLWE k SON. Iron Factors. I'ettevillo will mast with prompt attention. , JNO:11UXN1611 A CO.. Jane 20. '67 . • . 25- WM. THOMPSON 4 .., ' Banker and Dealer in Exchange, Opposite the Episcopal Charth, Ititsiitte, , Pa. .TTNCURREN'r - Mon y, ,Cold and lu Sliver, blind Warrants, ie., bought altd sold. 'Rill' strictly attend to all collections eritrtrted to his rait -negotiate baldness paper, twos. stocks, and all others*. curltles. Money received on cteposit and / Interest al , lowed. it Reference-a—Messrs. DIXriCL k Co., Philadelphia; ITo . C. W. Ilcorvs, Pottsville; Jon* SIOPPE74 tresldent 31 neneßeek,PottalUe; BestoParizesor,Zai.,Ponielll and C. Loans, Esq.. Pottsville. , I • . Pottsvillis 14 , -.• her 7,'57 I r 15 . --r. "OUR MUSICAL FRIEND." AWEEKLY PUBLICATION OF LOTIEST SHIM, contaltduile pi p es. Pries only u ants. • .4)C11 MUSICAL Vatt.im" la Filed.with the beet Egos, Duets, Operstid Arias. Polkas, Weitsee..te.. for the Voles and Plano. , The selections are made; Dom lb, best Amerkan and Euro pean Composers. 'Attention is ailed to the pries of the work. One year's subscription will lead to an accumulation of iimbionable Mule, which would cost in any other way, at least $2.00. • . Nos. I to 0, now imbed, contain selections from the Opera of Don Giatintil. La Pi ()pilots., 11 Tttrratore, Lame lla Borgia, Bohemian OK, La Traidata, tr. tr. Subscriptions received at • B. LIArNAN't. Bw'k end Music' tore. Th% vg4t . o l tio . i.gt . ratt o E N c s !o A v . E st. - for many ycoirs Principal of the Preeparatory 1) .. .pertinent of Pentorylranis Obilegr. will Open a Select Bchool In the New Academy Building. at P.inegrcrve. He wilt teach all the bninches . usually taught lu our Illgh Schools and Academies. and will prepare pupils wishing to take a full course of study for any class In Collkie.— Those desiring to quality themselves for business Will . enjoy special advantages forso doing.. . • , Plszonovis Isliiiely situated and accessible by Rail. road. \ - . Sat-Boarding can be bad at very reseoaable tales la private families. The School will romtientte about the Pita& of Jima,— For terms and other Information. address 1 . "HOARD ow DILINCTOSS, Piruirear." May 15, . . 20-tt PIANOILAND IVIELOD_EONS• Of.the bast mintsiatatataireo.warratateirt LA 0 R SALE BY T HE" L'. siztscriber. All Pianos and Mel o. ileonisold by him will be warninted—lf not what they are, represented, they can be returned.— All kinds of Melodeons will be sold at Manufacturers' cash pricesin Pottsville, by which the purchasers sacs the earriage and risk of transportation. Minos wlllbe snit - from : 10 to $2O less than regular city prices ambid log to the value of the instrument. Those who preterit be calling on us, and receiving a , !Mier of erOit,, can mate thelrown seleetionsettbe Manollketatets.kseerthlu the prices. and we will furnish the Instrument selected at the above rates. If there is soy doubt' in this DAV ter—all we hags to say is-TAY US. • • _ sII.IIANNAN. c 4 l.4.extrut i `Ur . CUICACIO,! yI7FFAUI.N.Y. CLEVELAND:Ohio. ALBANY, N.Y. ' ' DirritOlt A.Etudest enteritis either of Mess Colleges has the privilege of all for en unlimited time. PHILADELPHIA COLLEGE, S_ E.tOrtLet of Soventh Arid Ches tnut streets. :1{1)Alb or asnaggs. . • JOHN B. lITERS, allnutts L. lIALLOWELL, Prof. JOHN S. HART, W.C.PATTERSON. IiDMUND A. SOUDEIt, MANION WILLIAMSON, . O. B. TRU ITT, J. wog. COLLECIATE COURSE.' • •. • '— • .In all Its ntostopprcressi forms, illopuni to Ihe various dr. meets of Trade and Commerce. feel tiding (I•Deral WW,,sale and Resit 31enstatile, Shipping. Forwarding. Coonmissiou, Dan king. Exclisoge, Alsoufactoring. muting, Stsambiot I ng, te. c. , i; • Peasasksiship. i" • • itood hand writing is regarded,, of Rho, S rstimpor., taao, and le guaranteed to ail inmploting thsConcso. COtiIERCIAL CALCiILATIONS, NERCAN CORRESPON DCAVE USAG,S .rke sto • e. • lAzity Lectares are dehrered upon the abort, sa6je . ds 3 DIPLOMAS are avaided'to Students'Maipleting the. Copcseend pitolog the tekestary execnittatiott.. • General lI ntarinollan• • - . • Trii tiMprietors of these Ooltegea design perfecting. a elm ha of &hoots ttorusbout the priodp i el eines of got Bast and We.t. that shall aced to young men optonstubi." ty to 4tialltY tbetneelfee In the various modes of . dolog, bustneve. not only In Otoet Coututerriel Ceutnut.-of the East t but In the greed and =ming West, also. The ea' tahlittunettiof such Schools Is believed to be tudtarra sable to thia result. , . • The Schools at alit above poll* are sy Ina inlaid/nu' 'Over SOD ntudento weft lu spun upon, theca %luring huitirla4ea Sessloa. j • There are no lens god oovaeattooe. Stedeota may thealorecialuesuldpeustoutu W e tnisdkl without rotor , *mai toW,amon. ' .. • -• " •: ": • , • Turnout - • •'• -• • • foi Wallet • Coo rm. tothidpap . .w.o.NotoWcitlug. Lek-tuns. , GO Dook•Ktppion 'fbr, Dolt Calm*. ;;' St OU agrfloir. Anther put!ositinr gond for CotalogursialCk. 11144 Aidnom p l „.; MOT- #43111.112'036::•- ; , 1. . 14J-4/1 I. • Vottp. LITTLE ROOM &be ecanas..llh fairy der;bol &My their °ebony sin And her shadow plays like a •• • Am= Ipmi garden **. The golden WA Is danei lL nibrigli VIII the maul of bet halr; And bee gal? yeang lotto axe wa • To,ttiihroolog of the Like a 'partial lawn datilonada bo ganially along. As a wild young bird sha earcdatb Tim burden of • cans. Tba "maw towers int 'listed Around bar da•eing feet. • And on bet cheek lbe 11110faiMt .bnealbitig snft and atm& , !be very sanboun swents to • ' . • Above that holy hind. Aod the wild dowers at her coming. Their riehat fragrasie shed. - And oh 1 how lovely /I'M and futriranere Mingle in the Ilk within. • Oh I how fondly do they beetle I Bound the sold that knows no She tomes, the spirit of our A thine of mortal birth, 1. Tat bearing still a breath of burins, To redeem her from the earth. ,• ithe tomes in brlzitkobed IGO Unrolled by Outer And passed' by our wayward Adiemtdoddotilett., Oh I blessed things an children! The glits Okamoto') love; 1 ' Tbuy viand betwixt ouv worldly bout, And better tbinpi above. Tbey.link us with the enhit world ' By purity and tenth; , /-. And keep our harts OM !Yeah edn young • , - Viltb the proem@ of their youth- . . Ifireckseoad's Afogapits. t3rotoglcuL Pro*sear' TrepPe tercet a before flap Se la erlkllit Comity ?esteb :es Inette.ate. In November last, Prof. Trego Hof Reading, deo liveieff's series of interesting' ledtares before the Schuylkill County Teachers' Institute, of which the annexed is a report: • Arritaffoot Semites ' NO flirt C 'Prof..Trego. of the:Univereity t.f Pennsylvania; delivered the first of a series of lectures on Ge ology-and Mineralogy.' ' Ile expressed his regret thatillie limited time which Gould be afforded to him it uld necessarily prevent him from entering as much into detail SA might:ln some *eases, be necessary, in order to 'Convej a cleat Understanding of. acme brenches 'df his subject; but -would endeavor to give a corn. prehensive viaerof some of 414 -ilementery prin. e tptes of the science, by' Which !the - attention of theludience might be awakened . 'Ao, farther inves tigation.. , I Unexpliined the connection between Mineral. agy and Otology, and their dependence Upon each other, Mineralogy consists in the description of sepaeatii mineral substabces, the determination of theti.various characters: end 'properties, and the sysiiinatie gement of their! verifies species. Geolngy, tuvestigates the origin', etre:nuns, posi tion and reistire situation of ruFks or aggregate mineral tn a they .exist. to the earth, and whatever relates tq the mineraloileal constitution of the crust of the, globe. Simple Minerals, though tbey venally cents n several'_ different elmnentary substances, agpesr uniform and homogeneous in all their parts. The elements of .which they are composed are so in; timafely'combined and blended together as to ex• hit& uniformity of appearance in the • Compound minerals,' on the Contrary, usually show by their external aware,* that they are composed of two or more simple; minerals, either merely adhering to eack.other, dr orie being im bedded in the other: Compound minerals are emrimonly called cocks, and the description of these, including their mode of 'mutual relatione.Ae., belongs to the azienee of geology. lie referred to various -external or physical characters of minerals, and also'to`their chemical compositton sea Indent of distiogniehing thud. Among the .external eheractere of mitierale the most obvious are form, structutilerraetere, hard nese, color, lustre, traneparenel ffexiitility, spe-' title ' gravity,.ke. • .1 . • The principal elemeatary'sabstancea which'en., ter into the chemical •Comettaliion of minerals, rocks and lolls were referred tre,iebti their various' combinations described' in dial ;constitution of a' number of the more common Varieties of ipeol-' mina. A simple mineral is t thus a eumpound body, composed stimetities of many chemical ele-! Menu" in a elate of enathination.! Noels ere:com, pound' minerals, compelled of a number of simple' minerals united together by. itigregation or cm! besion. Carbonate of time, or, rearble,le a &lamle stifieraf, ectisieting _of lime end carbonic acid and if exposed fur a consideratile time , to a red . heat, the carboOlc acid is driven off, 11131 i lime, or the Glide of Calcium remains:. Granite is a rock; Composed of three simple minerals, quartz, fold; spar end mical,eaCh of, which is a compound of different chemieal; ; eleniffn ie. :Qaarts .-is nesrli pure silica ; feldipar. is a combination of silica; alumina and potash or lads, as the case may be; and!mica is a chemical 'compoutd of silica, alai mica, potash; oxide of ken, finerie 'acid 'and water. • . • - Ifis pointed, oat-the ,various' modn by. which some Of the more etimmon: minerals may he'd is tinguished from others: which they resemble, itud urged the importance 14 students of mineralogy, of collecting specimens and attentively observing their. various distinetive characters. Though the etady.olthis scienee may at first appear to ini difficult, uninteresting or repulsive'', I little Prael" tine and perseverance will soon shim that there ie order and beauty in• this department of na tare!) productions, and -;eyery onward - step will still farther develop this order and harmony, ald:rem , .. der the study of minerals and rocks one of the ,moat seductive end interesting pursuits in which an ititsirine mind ean be engaged. 1 .i Evantso SEsuor, It r oeulara"4. • 'Prof. Trego delivered a lecture' on Geology.- ; Ile rah' that the ul-ject of this science is to ascer tain and de velop the structure of the earth; to determine the disposition and arrangeaMot of tbe " various strata of which its crust is composed; this constituent mineral) materiels, litbological cheer cetera and organist remains of the .various rock.-:• strata to which we hare Settle. either on the war fare or in excarationa ;—ther relative positions of these rocks with regard to each other; their ele vation{deprersion or inclination as ref erred to the horisoutal orperpeedicular position of their beds or:layers ;—the enures which may have given them this position, and those which may ultimate. ly. operate to produee a change of arrangement end give them other forms and characters: This may be termed'scientific or theoretical geology. . Bat geology has another object which eimuld not be neglected in this utilitarian age, when the intelleetand the industrial energies of mankind are so unceasingly devoted to unwearied efforts to discover and bring into' productive usefulness .whatever may be discovered in- the dark remises of the mine, in the dusty laboratory of the chem ist, or the littered workshop of the , artisan or the machinist. This otject belongs to ecotioarie geology Ind embraces the discovery 'of whatever useful substances may be conterntad in the earth and in the rciCks, the causes, nature an d , position of, these deposits; their relation to the:carious strata, and . their extent,. capacity and quality. A want of _knowledge upon this subject his led to * vast ex penditure of time, labor and Money in fruitless ;searches for coat and other eels:able_ minerals Id places where a geologist, having onl y a respecta ble knowledge of his science, would have at ones 'decided she search to tat tinkle . and unavailing. 1 , The Professor showed the' fallacy of the idea "which has been entertained by some pious, but not well-informed . wen, that the doctrines or ge ology are irreconcilable with the seriptiral se. count of the ciliation of the world. "In the be. giamirg Go created the heavens !and the eartb.'e But when as this. beginning ? It is nowhere 2 6 said that d created the heaven! and the earth in the first day, but in the bligietning; and this beginning may have. preeededt the snore detailed operations of the six days, 11l a period of unde fined dunition,a Tait cutlet -of unmeasured timer-plaid perhaps to millions of years, during which geological changes Were going' on. Does the Bible say that when God erented the heavens and the earth, be did-more, at the time alluded to than trausfurna them out of Omni:mat, existing . materials? • ! ' , ,": Geologists, then, should node accused of skip- Genet or infidelity whet, they hold that the earth Was "in the heginointe calk, into exitance by an all-Wise erosional an epleb of unmeasured distant° ; that after this followed a period of nti defited `duration, daring Which' "the earth was without form end void," butlW which the physical Outstations of change and atraligement in the geo logical structure of the - globe were going on; that at length, in the progress of the divine soothe and, :goveroseent, thee arrived a *cried when if wiiii: thiiwill of Almighty goodness. that the earth 'Wes to be fitted lot the abode of the existing races of animals and of Mawr and at! this period the se rout! giten is the Dible of the fir days' creation trait legios.with the work of the first day.. Whit ,all that had interred before this. great operation of fitting and adapting the *pad for the habita tions's!" man, the human rectified no eimeern,and 11111 , WIT000 right to epin s plein that the -inspired writers have given us: no kndwledge on the cub jest. ' . - ' ; -The eolocidenees,botween toe order of events in the work or ereatiou is deihed in the boplY Of Genesis, and that:it: , sm folded byt, geological Wean , 'Miklos hits been 41417, ithown , by Professor Jamb , son; arid the illustrioes Curier. the Ifthest so ' thntity to geology, his - declared that the ei der which the maciogisay °tillagesgee to the different erlisehstof-ereationsif Pcott ilea Itroill ut !bet ,whicbtkas been ,dtdi}ced [Pm laffillid r izpu coneideritiour.. ' ,' I . - ' ' ! - - In the ens* of this' lettere Prot T. give et, Infer bletory of thic progress of geology - him , ttial gad' 4waius *tibe science •ip its prim" k 4eTil ormtut, aAd Edema kr the Iheuttea of :Imiltrith • „, i 1,...,, ...,.„7„,....„ , ,_•.,,, _ . • • , . . %reef. Batton, and Other early promoters of ge *logical knowledge.` at it is to the persevering labor and innwitigations of geologists of more ma - dere times shot polo/yews/its prompt advanced state as a Patine...l7le names of a number of thase.both Noropein end /merit:ens were mei • boned as having greatly promoted correct views on various subjects . Connected with geological In-, veatigsdion and diktorery. U• .pot t ed out Various modes by which a new . ber of the more eouienin minerals may be distin guished: from ,othein, *bleb they resemble, and urged, the Important:ota students of othsetaion of collecting ,oPecituens, and attending particularly to their various distinctive characters. In coo weetkei with this he spoke of the importance of enemies obsereatitth, EA of the siquisitiou.of • that practial kaowledgit which leanly to be gain ed by examining the minerals sad rocks them selves. Books alone cannot thoroughlt,thaett ge. ology.,tbongh they; may afford important aid to the student. Rif mot see and handle specimens, obserre the recto in place, study theta with close 4 attention, end rii Is ai k their distinguishing peculi. strides. • 1 ~.:._ ?tie leetereirair mended by remarks upon the ems of geology 'Lit importance to the miner. the civil eagineer, the tatilder arid the agrieulturist.— : No - country upon earth offers a greater induce ment for the eotivation and practical application ..:of this seiesoe - t melons'. own: Our coal fbrutation his no equal la the world fur flames. attd catgut. Iron, the most urefil of metals, is food in almost every State Glebe Union; copper and lead abound to west, and 04 bills of California glitter with gold. , We have limestone, marble, gypsum, slate, marl 'and salt; building stones of nearly every kind,; roils so various in quality and geographical position as to yield almost every article of agri cultural production. -Having thus all the physi cal ektmentiof national and indie ideal prosperity, ' it w ill be our own fault if we hit to develops and impress them by that scientific' knowledge and active indistry erbiebslone can render them soot. ems of public and private benefit. • Ildortsratt gasstox, Notating fr. Piet Trews continued his lectures on geology. Ile remarked that the observations end rematch es of geologisti, id 'many pane of the world, hive now been sufficiently extended and multiplied to show that daring an inconceivably long period of time; the aortae, of our globe has been undergo. lei modifications and changes. Of these the most marked have been produced by the uprising of mineral matter-in 4 melted state from beneath the sorrace; the wearing away and removal to other localities of this !natter, either in its first state, after cooling, or in- some secondary condition, by atmospheric influences, and the action of waters variously distributed for the time being; the pro. ',maims of the mimics of animal and vegetable life, 'duties at least a portion of this long kph, of time, among deposits accumulated - mostly to heti. zontal layers beneath waters; and easily, by the unquiet state of the earth's surface itself, by which eonsiderable I bare been at different tines raised above, or depressed.beneath the level of the ocean; oecasionallyi :whole masses of mineral mat ter of various kind!, or enormous beds of stratified rocks, have been squeezed, bent and folded in va rious direetiuns, and sometimes ridged up into ranges of mountaine. ' The same agencies which have produced polo: gical revolutions ere still in operation, obedient to the laws whiettlihey observed in remote time and itreisantly active in the never-ending work of decay;and felicitation, The land is continually worn away by thei action ajar and water; its loose materials are, carried off by. rivers and dap°- . sited at their mouths, or delivered to tides and marine currents which distribute the sedimentary matter over / the bed of the ocean and form it fete 'extensive - strata. By the combined influences. of 'pressure, of heat, Of electric forces and the infil tration of cementing substances, these depOsits are consolidated and bonverted into rocks, . By these-and other ceaseless operations of na ture aris new islands and continents produced, as others are worn away and disappear from the face -of tbe earth. But Abe operations going on beneath the waters would be incapable of effecting the great plan of, geological change end renovation, if ' they wore not asAsted by subterranean matzo tient, whieb, in the course Of physical events, lift the newly . forrnedl strata above -the waters, and render them suitable Rhoda fur man, and the ex isting races of Plants and animals. • 'The undulating; and disturbed position of the rock strata over most of the surface of., the globe, afford incontestiblo proof of the action of disturb ing forces at different periods of time, and all an alogy leads us to the conclnaion that these forces' have their origin in the central best of the interi or miss of the earth, producing subterranean movements nt greater or leas intensity.- - . under this head may be 'desctibid all the subierraneert phenomena, whether of volcanos, of earthquakes. or of those insensible movements et the land by which some reginos tate been elevated or de pressed without convulsions. The operations of volcanoes. and the ,eTeet of volcanic action were described, with reference to the eruption* of liresurinZ. Buis and a number of - other active' volcanoes in various parts of the Submarine-vockleoce whicit,have erupted beneath the water / of the ocean were referred' to, and shwa numberlof extinct volcanoes, particular ,ly those of Astatine i in France, from which there has been no eruption known since the earliest re cords or history, nod the fires of which may have • been extinguished before the country was inhabi ted by men. • j . The effects of eirthquakis in producing geolog ies] chimps in thii . roeky!iinti earthy, crust of the globe were next daseribed. These : changes may be produced by sadden and violent convulsions, attended by roio. r destrection and death ;• or they may be grednal; and alm'ost impireeptible, os in cites of tilt slow 'elevation or depression of 'con siderable portb,na 01'the'eartles'iurface. lirreasoos Ezssios, Novcasan 3. - Trege explained the classifieation of rock formations, particillarly with relevance to those of. our own State; end described these formations es they occur and otay be observed in passing from Philadelphia to Pottsviller. In traveling over any, extensive region of coun try, if we remark the various rock fottuitions its they present themselves, we notice two very dis tinct modes of arrangement. Some lie ir,regular parallel layers, more or It.. upturned from a hell sontsl position—while another eines exhibits no definite shoe:are of any kind, being, massee of various crystalline minerals, aggregated or ce mented together without soy sailors' order.— There are, therefore, twokinds of rocks, differing from each other both in structure and origin, the stratified asid,thesiestra4ed. The stratified rooks occur in layers or strata, and were originally successive deposits of sedi-N moot from water. Renee thole beds which lie beneath are the most ancient,and where Iwo kinds of stratified rock's occur io junction, as, for in stance, a sandstone beneath •. slate or a lime. stone the sandstone Is the older reek. By this simple principle cif position the relative ages 'of most of the rocks, nosy be determined. The vari ous circumstance! attending their deposition may also. to a great ektent. be inferred from the char acter of the strati. Thin layers of very fine Mk tales and of ineirrly nniforut thicknese have beep deposited froze quiet waters, and those shich con sist of coarse...nil, gravel and pebblesare the pro ducts of agitated waters. The layers of stratified rocks, thus originally composed , of mud, sand, gravel, &0., with 'hells and . othei animal as well as vegetable matter sometimes intermixed, hare since become solid by the agency of beat, pressure, cohesion, crystallization,Ae. • The nostratitled rocks, on the other hand,usital, ly occur in irregular masses, sometimes orerlylag other rocks, or sometimes in veins or dykes Gutting across the layers! of stratified reeks, or forming beds interposed, between these strata, Modern ' lavas and ancient granites are alike tinstratitied and of igneous' Origin • the various enstratilled rocks having beer,' erapied like lava, in allaid eon dition at variOne.periods in the geological history of the earth. s j - Owing to the convulsion. arising from volcanic action and . otheri movements connected with the central beat off . rbe globe the - layers of stratified roeki have bee n inure or less broken and tilted up so that few of 'them now Hein their original hori zontal position. ; This inclination of the strata enables us to easily' s knowledge of • their strut ter* to an cetera which, would be utterly impossi ble if they, had remained horizontal. In that case nor knowledge would be limited to the depth ,we might attain by mining, which is utterly, insignifi cant when compared with the extent of rock strata exposed to our view by the 'upheaved and Inclined position of Seeeenite beds and layers whiefilie can oaten 'observe for 'miles in extent, In regular succession. • Thus when we pass over the :ethics of the ground, at rig t hlOnglee or directly across the di-. rectton of the strata, we cross the edgesUr thick ness-of the rock and thus gain the same know ledge of the structure and *accession of. the lay ers as we should. by a ..perpendieular descent, if the rocks bad retained their horizontal position. Il we travel beta , . miles over strata which have silverage dip tir !Definition of 45 degrees,' the thickness of this formation, redacted to a 'perpen dicular toessurement46l jthe ante sumps will low a little over three miles end a quarter. ,New the deepest mine - In'tbe world is but about 3000 feet, or a little more than half a mile in depth ;SO tbet we'have for AM Mille 6f itifthee absenstioo.. a , view of the.struta about ;seven tizas more eaten siviollati that afforded by the deepest exesration ever Made by bzinisn'power. ' lh connection With tall pastel his subject, the lecturer adverted to the advantages, resetting to man from this unitearst and • displacement of the rock strata; foqiona thia muse we end coal, thaw. Mote and many:thei valuable mineral produets brought to the Ourfastiad made areenible to is, which if they bed ,rermined is their original bor. , iiontal etheld fume lain,so deep 00 to be • beyond the rsaoh tif men ' Evaiuto Brestolt.'ffoiritztaxi 5. Prof. Trego cOrteluded his Isetsres tin' geolicy . e the subject thiiesedridttheis ihe general theory 4 :of each. l'ersistlt'sis. iteilll Isoorstisitii resell re. .rnsigh Or t)s.fiktig.essk:giy No 2 . ittior otbsiniet• Thelitireet iiithreOgiequisitfthe - eldest Of WI istratilod tbetipsiOnsit, stagily efivisisa, vacs slate, hurublsailetslate chlorite tott-talc•.blitios AC." • ' . . t • STtiIt , .3I I IIINTINIOFFICE , 11wrianotetarwl noises:inn are sow props» II an. 4 :#o l S 11, 11 5 f . 04 04'0 , " Ma at toe velewat la* s , 11 ums Jeraux.,eboaper tbaa It aka Welk) atiVilliok4atibliidlakelli VA en* Sy aucliss . . ieeke.P4l9//al;Role= • kluge Pa ltivr. • rights, Road , - Aeporiyaelte e •Arbklesef Jocefintt. rime Bole At . B a/ 8 11 4 1: ' • '• Oven. lbebe../W.; -• 7 . tbeverfsbetteet settee. Out stock et JOR TIPZio Mee a:twelve Qua tbAt of amp other elite la thlseee.i Ilea of tbe Btate,anit ire keep beadsmoploredesprtooqyl birJobbleg. &lug smelts! Motet ourself, 1,4 t a 111 guano:ltalica? , work to be es Ova( as ally that esti le tittemi obi 1p %be titles. isitrtmo IN COLOlttilltie at tlisborteet settee. ••• _ =Mil =OE Books Untad Is every variety *idyl*. Mink poll. of every description manufactured ,bonad and reilinkto *rarest saartret tootles, • • - • - • NO. 12. Theme reeks as erystalline In their strident' aid are deititsto,of tequila. ,From tide oinateistanolg, of their containing no vestige, of ealtesi sr rep, table remains, thity at* called by setae, geologists the agate (without tits) *aka - 'le wielmeely supposed that the candid** of the oar* at, the this of their depaeltioe Rai net 1414 .04,Ithe 1 4.1 latent, of animal* and plants, or that t tlify bore been'siddisited to the adios of inteassbeit, wbic3 ' has greatly altered their edema Baseline: , ; 44 ^ Next-id_order above these is the: aeries seer Owes Pilled lower secoodery„ or more renew'? tonsedritalaiorolo fagoting lif e ) strata, vbtob eau. tale the rasnains of the earliest anises sidphast4 that ate blown to haws existed, and of which the! spooks became extinct as en stay, period of ego. logical 'history. The palisosole note *east" cites; of sandstones, limestones sad slates, mote or, less regularly madded, sod extend upward so' far as to include the carboniferous strains with the esagnesiau limistoao god the new red caedetone above the goal wesiores. . . " The next series in the wending order, I. clots. posed of the upper secondary or wescisoic, (middle life) forinStion; hose ancient than the hat IMO. tioned, cod containing the fossil remalas of haa mew numbers of animals and plants eiteintbet, in the robin ; but all of whose' spostes'haire long • slues become extinct.' • • " ' • A hove ibis last seethe tertiary strata, whiehmusa slat generally of more regelarAtui nearly hockey. tel layers of limestone, sand and ,clar, containing, witti 113111ily extinct animal and vegutable 'spade*. a numbet of epodes which still exist.' This lathe kaimseeiti (recent life) series. ettlVmore recent formation. called &Vt, eov._ era a considerable portion of' the earth le northern Istitudeal and Consists of scarcely stranded IDIOM of sand, tpebbles. boulders Ac., which base been transported' by extensive currents of water, rub, in; over 16e surface a direction apparodtly from the north or north-west. Later than all these, in geologist order, is the ufltseison.i comprising tboas aedimestary dsmindts which have beau aceumuleting slurs the ealsteuen Of men and the r resent races of animal and. sap. table life'. The !Wieser eonoladed his lecture by argd• meets and inferences drawn from established gso. logical hive, showing that our globe has cala(ed during an undefined and untneasulable period of time, doribg which it has been undergoing greet changes f surface and conditioa. That in the *hi lier-stapl'of its binary them wasprubably estate ofthinge l incompotible with theoxisterice of organist life ; but:tbat it was aftedwards peopled with suc cessive eleations of animal end vegetable beings each auccessive crestion;. in its tutu; vanishing from thetace of the earth and givipe place toasty forms and organisations, adapted toAlseenjoymenb of life nutter the now circumstanced produced , by every change, • .711 Shah tracing the Wori v es history, as recorded In the r;Jeks pages of the great stuns book, mail is found to be but the creature of yeeterday, ad compared with 'the globe which be inhabits, nod with other beings with which it has been peopled. We,find Ito traces of him or his works. ezeept in those very recent 'formation. now in proem. op the mere surface ; and even species of , and 'Oaths now existing are found to have been celled lice being before WM' ; fur their females- are found in deeper and older rusk e)rata. • • • There 11is abundant evidence to prove that the earth hail been peopled, during no inconceivable extent of duration, with myrida of living eras'. Mater, Crept the Orin dawning of life' twill that i which - geology and aeripture ooth declare to hays been the last and crowning set of creation. the planing of the human race upon a world prepared I for their existence, lust • and enjoyment. ' AIME:INDENTS OP LEADING snort , Mrs, Spidutis was formerly a lady', .wafting maid; Forrest, the American "bowler". was an errand-buy in s Philadelphia grocery store; Mar. ditch is the sun of a baker, and used (0 serve his • father's customers from a large basket which he carried on his head; Dilly . Barbie was ease a ~, "printer's devil" in a London printing • Wheel '' Barney Williams wit, fur many years, e,reguler New York "dock-wolloper ;" J. R. Scott,. when a opeevish" boy served as cabin "flunky" on an'nys. tar vessel in the Philadelphia trade; Charlotte Cushman, before -she curried actress,. made a liv. ing for herself, •and mother and sister, by the needle, (all honor and prudes to her !) Collins, the Irish comedian; served an appraatimiship ender a Dublin barber, emits even note this de, reckoned an excellent "shover;" Charles . Matthews was a "gentleman born." but was so unfortnnats as to lose her title; J. D. Roberts is the "sob of a gun. smite," still living in Wilmington, Delaware; J..' E. MrDunough was formerly a butcher, and need' to "kill for Keyser," whose slaughter house was in Spring Garden, Philadelphia; one of the_Calt fornie "stars" is a native of New fnundliod, aid is the son of a "mackerel catcher;"—(we wouldn't give his hame for the world—he'd be the deub of he;) Ned Bingham, It all hist a gallant soldier, omit ' a clever actor, and' now a vender of erst•rate el. gars and tobaeoe; George Jordan, the handsorde : and 4lonted "fop" atotio served an'apprinticashlp , to the printing trade, end is said to be one of the i moat rapid type slickers ever "turned out" of Bal. • tituore—(l4 pewter, a c hear That tieing* has be come diaguated with the stage, and intends nisis.' ming his ".easit".iit the stand;) Pleoide commeaced 1 his public - career by playing sectood•Addle . on si I Mise.i.elppllat.boat ; J. E. Johnson was once 'a piii.nianer in Lannon, but (Indio; Mirth tit be the i better kind of medicine, be east aside his mortar and pestle, autd'ttutted his attention. and bileitte to comic sining . , at srbitil be is "stu4ning ;" Gar • tiek'S father kept a tei.pla alley ; 'Ltura Keen was once a him-614W in a London saloon, wed . rock min a '''"ain.altog" and a "bready.sinaiilexith the t best of-theta; of MCEI3•IO ' BUChIIOIIIIOI . early lite iniknOw nothing — like "Topsay," we "guess be *ain't born, but grimed ;"Boureidault Is the see of a Worcestershire:primer, .whiob pursuit be followed several years before going on lbw stage—,' (this wiFt account for ,his "ir.ibbasitig" previa* ties ;)4olinlirnugham was raised ion charitable l soop-honee, in' Dublin{ hence he is celled a *broth' of a boy t Ckanfrao is a carpenter by.' trade; Charles Wheelie, served several year* at tha tailoring business. A number of Collura* eq.. tors rose from obsi.erity. ;One of the inastbaire of them sold "swill•milk" . on, the Fin Puillees New Turk, several years prior to his deb step the stage. It will be seen front the above that "pov erty and :ow birth, the twin Jailers of the daring' heart," are not barriers to the atialement of fate, and position In the , drained° professiperit.' .. Ir.you wish to mako )ourself a fa!writa witji your neigltbore, buy a dog and iittliito op to dm collar all night. They won't steep fur thinking Of you. • LI English printin t e the letter B ocentsslay times as often as G, fifteen time, al often u &e. ' to other latigeetes the prepordod It Mee: . . Piassaa . of Paris is eumporod of . 46 per eel* lime, lime, 33 ger coot. sutilatio said, and 21 psr not. Sox , ' laavaa have 170,000 patio is a 'quanta* of surface, as shorn by a powerful mieruseopa. 1r your *late eras, otay mud_ proroko but ace i*,tho poker OR your old. ac the stare, - - ' , ALcosoi. hu biota exposed to s teuiPirititei Of 91 deg., btat•wae frozen. ' Tam length at a link in la laud or Ciudiros ashy is 7 92 109 Inches. . . . • VPLA!P timber Is more durable than Ibis fro* low nod wet loealitler. , 11111-Thera ars so,oeG wen is lowa ;capable Of bowie g ono.. • • •' . pEt'A.Catholic chaplain is shoat bailie bit*. doted i l is ri . o t h ooe he di fis l . iy of goi , fitairscso . boiin made near Dehinneii, Os; • •,•1' •• per-The Shamokin Jae -The obit. his be in Wood. pirSevea millions of gallons of whialti ars annually consumed is &titian& • j1811".A - young lady of Newborypotti Was.; - N. candy skated , tms mUss.in fortylolonsts. 1100 r BINDERY, llisccttaaq. beaibi in Philadelphia last weelr,lK. ' • pirTbers are 80 papers . publiabedia /dr The etreestb. of the PreabluArtay to in, 00 men. , , . • PN•During die, put ye#3 0 .413,681 busb**4l l bituminous coal were shipped 'finial Pittsburg. Aferffbir Sebuyik ill 'Neerviiion COuspany's work. ars 10A.milei leoß. and coat $111,940.000. , Jlier'ffrekougb of the Oboes. sugar cane: bee been raised to lowa, this mason, to =skew**- . 'lion galloui of Sirup. • ` jfArThe Ohio veleiale catenate the populatilla of that State et 3.300,000. jut •abost the Arms wigglier* ewers foc - Soiloglirsolsi is 1959,\ Pirtbe iron Works at diII Hail. Coital* coon. 1. which Bost about $lOO,OOO, werirsott at `skier. iff Sale fir about 9I0,400:' Aa lurtlinee 'of Mee •buaty. of no ?imitation.. • I - Pr* Stale tensile of• Teau, just , teltan, shows a population of 458,820>.stranst 212.492 la th• !year 1850 4 when lowa had bat 192,600; 'thttistib sh* now baa atilt 60041110.: • . ATP.* Goo ,of lb* Uuital Stites. cenAt,t3ur, - vey for tbirttoo yein ending in' .18.36, Ras 14,- 710,000, i!nttfor half the yes, otos? it IN* $2611.. 000, making o total of 5it,?.47,000. • 4 1//".i Basses 'eorteeputulsor of lb* illattlatd Thou ort•iti•A• lapsa tab, friend puked,- inn s*. rods,. What If the Spanish dee{ ,eboaltkin and . bomberit Nett Yotkr a I sen net 'lmagism seek •s*rhstsidity sod t 0141.100 ooi; Hi *moo i r s t 4„ .Ple *ids meothattrettld timy /Poo Howflforl it 10,000 EpsOA•N 01,0414 1 ,13ntl Aftfol„,/. Ya..lli4t, ca).cAii beliictithewierisi theiwifauld' built will iny - disteibanas; lbspi0000:001 .0 , 4 ,4 4t0 tho,oooa.kaw.. l Pirauliu4L PA' Qvien S tAt.' - •