W . ..----', F TilE_,aits 1.11911113' JOURNAL. . ~.....,... Z 4- ~.....- . , • ~- 4 , - ~ -, , , - -•- -r• ' '' ~,_- --, .1 . , -, ~...._ ~. ~,, ~: _ ‘,. _ , ~,, . ~ • ~_,,,_•,,._,,,,_, -- , ft '•-- - :,...,:,....;.^:,,,,. :,::,_,,,,,,:,,...,,,,,= 2,2;:,!::,4-:,,-.. ff ...,, , ,. . ,, - ;: , 5, ...; . x ,,:,, ._..— .,;, .? , --, 1,,.,:,, z,,, . _ z:,:,, , - - , , , .. , .:, ,,,,%.,,, ,.' . .i : ::....;,.:„, - ~i . , . ..„ 4, -,, ,f, . 1 i. ,. i,,, ,, , _. 4,,.„,... , ,. 1 , , ,..„ WIWI strawereas: TIN I N bed within six toonthe- , -/u3d egl MI ir -.. ', • .. ... , , , •- INI -y- - --, •-• •!. • - ''.-j:-.. -. ,', - 4.: eT' ,...... I -.lllt - -, -,- •-,:- -... ~,: • `'• , -,i ii ,,,.. 1. 6 -- ., C Y lAO it " a ' ' 'Olt 01 , $ ...,4 w ithin the ..? . ~,,.. - : ,- . , ,.. ~ - -, ' .''' '' * ' , I , ' ' '"" i - , . , 4 - i t F.''' . P TO =trap ' •. - ~-.- - 1, ----.;-I'-'7, ‘± ~, , ~:7 -. • i -.... ..°., ~, • • ': -' 1 't ff e oploS te one " o dd Ale eck ' ''-r ,' ' ~.- --' • ..- ...;- - 7 ! -.;:-,, „ ... .4 , ' -' 1. '. • • : ~ ---i •.!. - 4 '1• -' •----, , 1111 " 4 d ,441 , • _ ea co • , , ~ ... ,1 • • ••_ , ;•• '•-, , ~. • va de i dn, l,_ , -.-•- ''.- "• ~ -v ~,,, _ ~ , -,,...---. "-• ' -4. ' foon.„ ~,,.,riptiod. mud he feverishly - paid le ad , -' . • - ; . - ..f . • . „ s . ~ , . .;?: . - 4 -- • 'T'' • ' • , -,,',..".„!„-; -.„. ~_ l 2o ' j Ne t to oleo addren. : . • - OF"' to este:oat aye °titans: ' ' ' - ...... 14ealtit will Le furelelied to Carrion, and other" . , - , . ,- . , • . ,4- tik . , . ~ - . l t - -- - ' -- ' '-' 4. ' • .0 -4-1 .i ',... --, -...-- 11 0 • ,ni rople.. ra#h oil delivery. , 11 E4 . ,,,,„,T: - own and &knot IlutAeraaupplled with' the .'. "; . " , :, ‘: ~ • j _ 1 OTTS l i T i F ...._ x, G R i r RrpTc, t. , , vi .. ~ ~ ........„...........„... , ;:_,,•.,..,...., -. ENE AT - . . , AD E -..„,:ist,nadvan,o.. . 4, -, ........4 .. .... . T ' -• ' 4 : 1 %. - ..-igsifk -- - 110 * .:. •-- . 4 , , , --. TUC LAW or ItswsPArtis• . , _ . . . , Jr.-- - s - :-... -, , -4.• 1 . Gaer the dhaontinuance of their' neve -6 Derr -•- oi h . : l pabilrer mai continue to roll tfiem rstor," Are eattl. irre;'.'.4 neglect or refuse toltake their newew if s''''' o .o(tlcti to which they are directed, they are f ... ,„' 9° ,,,,ab1e unfit they have settled the bills au/ 'll, e tzt discontinued. " f if move'te.other Mama without informing 1 1 , s her, and t neexpa per. mar sonata the former they aye brld reeponnlble. • . t orts hare decided that Yetfortoirfo take orrerpst t.,,..,, the r are, or removing, and leaving them on. r.4 . 1,r, is prima feels evidenee of intentional fraud. n- . . _ _ IRON. WORKS: BOILERS AND STACKS'. • we.b he on sem er it prepared tosti r orders for llie above arlielet, with 1 1 ' I...kmaw dlemdeh, at the old pl,ew of tmelnew, „ J am:, tw Norweipan. 2A feet boilersalwaya on d, Also, the manufacturer of COAL AND OTHER SHOVELS, ,lye lem material and workmhoehip. Repairs prompt ,t,nded illar.Fans for mining vortasllsn always ly taod. JAIIEZ SPARES. plurals, August 27, 'l9 351 y . FOUNDRY a. MACHINE SHOP, Port uttrbon, Schuylkill co., ra. .• T. 11. W INTERSTEEI announces ht P !. S 4 read' nesP, from the tolgilete onttit or jb,the above named establiAment, to sup. Tdr;flcji ply all ordirs In his lino of !niftiness - such as for steam Engine's Itallreaull i e,j Delft Cars. PuMpe, Coal Breakers. CpSt l ngs and svainery of every pattern. Iteorarrantsfile. work to ire satisfaction, and aceendingly lieitp.mitronage , me and abnud: Jan. 27, 1 180 1 4.1 y • - FOUNDRY AND MACHINE SHOP;.' Steam Car rectory, dice ',=" NOTICE.—The business /f the late firm of SNYDER 3111. N ;S, will be r _egjell continued by the anbserlhel• In altits various branches of Steam Engine LW* . building. iron Founder. and Inannise• th;fl,f ail kinds of Machinery, for nulling Mil's, Blast r a .mir,s. Rail mad Cars, &c.. te. lie will alto con tin be u4n. , qx of Mining , and Selling the celebrated Pike pv , t 111,ite A sh and , Zeicis and Spohn Red Ash tlas, being sole proprleter of these Colli eWste • 0 EJEO E . 8 January 21, 18 x, POTTSVILLE RLLIN THE subscrib O ers are eon O. s Lecturing varlomodaes of Cot l~k'•"' weighing 22,23, 28, 30.32 al f ifir- : aum per yard. Also, larFe Haile •,„••••••• -approved patterns, irplo3l B awl pounds per yard. From the eiperien wars. we feel confident of making Balla u 14 . qual!ty by any mill in the country. A Alen t lons addrereed to Mearp. ye `JI F actor), Pottsville , will meet with pr urn.. J 0 ILN 14i Joni M. '57. PALO ALTO ROLLING ii i The eubmribtis be, el oft itki .q titmice to thdir friends and g _4: „. .. . I . . 4EL,,, „nay .. th at thel ,law .1 s , ' at Palo Alio is now , plate _ oferation, and that . tbey a , futniFh T ;ails of various pattern', welg t , . 70 lbs. per yard. Al 80. differen ' f Izes of led round meretinta' bn,r iron. . ' tlrders for rtilla or liar Iron arare etre) tad will meet with prompt sttgntio If 11 the - Rolling Mill, Bright k„, I reh'yi ard; iottre strV.. or at their °Mee. contr. f , Market aft ta. •, :. liti 'WO ,L . • Jan.l, '64 2 . . . . . TO COA OPERATOR. a.,III‘INERS. Pt • steer Bop er worst 1 . • • r \ . The subscriber. respect( Ily (nil* fi,....!" e attention of the buidnea commit ni• . , t to his' Boller Werke, o Railroad tin t,' , . ai pt . et.- belett the ' PjIMITI LT' Depot, !.... .--.-- Po tierille,Pa.,*here he is 'repereil to wed..? uro - ' . BOILERS F 4 EVERY DFSDRIPTI N, '. smo:l...Starks, Air.l ks,lllast Pipes, Gaso biefs, Drift A Cirs. d:. - .'... &c.. Ito era on hand. • BcPm a practl . Imerhanic.and haring r years de• rnPe.d.bint%i•lf entirely to this branch of the bitsiness, It e flatters hlinFelf t bat work done at his es iblishment Flli gixe Kstiotletlon' to all inn may tailor rim with a rlll. Individuals arid Core's:toles uillifl 4lt greatly s, their advantage to examine his work tkfo e engaging tisettherr. . JOU.' • 1.. NOBLE. Nov. 21 . '57 • 47• it • BEAVER MEADOW IRON Brice W. Hudson WO tem forms the ,public , that, hey k. proprietor of the lßearer DI roily Brass Works, and - is, tu " I "'"'"Mannfa ct ore. et ,this es Newt Engines 'At . every 'size; Pumps, Drift Cars. and every other description I'. Ins Ca... Units aultable,for the Coal minim, riness. on the most reasonable terms. , f)linders for Blast Furnaces and alachine Repairing of all, kinds done 'with nestn• Dwi at the lowest price*. All work In them. warranted to perform well. They the custom of those who may want articles Is this vicinity. All orders will meet wit a kialponuot attention. . 'Bearer Meadows, , ary 11 0 ; 1 . • ASHLAND IRON WOR The au beeribora nro no • , . Ctr an aim, pared to furnish, at thW Vforki,Steam Engines an nittiftc any power and capacity. In other purpmes, Coal Brea • MO pattern new in uve, tuget her with .raings of every description. cent and All give% and patterns, large Truck and lie furni‘beil at the shortest notice.' The ,sti T.r themaelvew that.lttarm urh ae every w rall pact trial martial:llc, they, will beat mtehi nary Aliat will compare favorably at 4...zi0n. All caltera directed' to 1.. I'. 0 A Ashland, Schuylkill county, Pa.. Will roes tentiou. LA'', (Lilt. . :it A El ,JOSEPH t . Ashland,Maylo, '57 ' DEHAVEN'S IRON-WO • • • The ellkllterqter ie manufacture eTgAN E icEdu, rower, Pampa of any (4 pe r ry . Breakers of everYoeeertlat every other kimier i u Mines, Breakers. Furniees:,Bolli'ea; From the facilities pole.eyied' for mann from long experience In the business. wor', ed out at this establishment, at•, the very ] and of a superior quality. re , herons desirous of putting up ,mar kind, are Invited to rail and exilmitie pat c , :ma acquainted with prices Wier(' co whore., orders °revery kind are Rollclted.and will be glued to their prompt execution. It'dI;LIAM Deermbee9.lBt7;l • • WASHINGTON IRON W.... .. Pottiort Ike, Po. ...pay TilOS. fr, JAS. ITU} , IN - 'respiiet t tally invite theattention• of the blI6l , .. ~ ; nom emitmunity b to their New Machin4 -Ala i 5 - t u t Shop end, Foundry erected beivreen Coal. `7IV: -..... and Railroad' Streets; and fronting on Norwegian street, where-they...are prepared to execnte ail orders far machinery of •Ittass and ' ron. 'web as i steam Engines all kinds of thiat In: for t illing lilla, , iri-t,and Saw , ilills. Single and Double sting l'lnups,l foal Ilreakers. Drift Cars , all kinder - 4nel! . d Castings, such as Chairs for Flat and 'l Rail; Fl gs. Switches , k.•„ Ic.; sit kinds of east and wrought Iron Shaft ing. li t :- log practical mechanics, and hasing•mad: the demands orthe Coal Region their study for years. also all kinds et ‘llehitiery In their line& buetness, the yllatter thetn. wire, that work done at thel r'estehlishment Will give sithlartion to all who may honpr them with a rail. 'All ..rice. thaukfully,reeeived and prozeptly executed,on the tuoA reawm able terms. r THOMAS WHEN, ' ;,. JAM.I4 - WitEN.., goy, 22., 'b7 , 47.11 . ' . . 4 ' . '. PINFOROVE IRON WORKS:' ' Piuegrove, lltT . Aauylkllll.luom . nera ' Pots et,: -. This eriablishment is now under 1 ,... pm,, the Superintendence of Jens 171 Wirt, 4 :, i , ......,, i 2! ilaq.,forinerly,fit the wiill 'known firm-of ' ,ern •,•," J. Wren . k Bros:— 01 Pap; ills. t 4 i ..:,"'"",.• • Mr,M ren'scicrerience a a Master Ma , rluolst, extending. through a erird of i any years. du e. ring whieh tim he has been (ti chticernetr ri +the erection ,r 9 of .0111 e of the largelt • Iron% ks in the United St:a ra, will be a suMrietit • guaranteel of the c erecter of the wok tweet nut of Ibis establishment. All ordors , by mall or pthartilse, for steam engines of any power with their connections,,mmehlyery for blast , femurs. roiling mills, forges, grist milisi saw mills. ma. chinery for 'using single and double acting pumps,- breaSeri, d'ilft, cars will receive prima aitantion. , , . Conoreted With the works is:a large et its car . factorY, callable of turning out large orders &tab. t lattee: The rare made at ibis establishment are. mf to none in the Stale for durability, while ;the style'e f -plate wheel manufacturel' and extensively used Is 'superior. and worthy the attention of Railroad coinpit les. By !Oriel attention to business, in all Ifs. details, the proprietor lopes the l'ln.gro,e Iron Works may la +ewe share of public pat riithigi , ,, - JAMES-L. ' UTTIN 0, -JulIN V. WREN.. j Proprietor. .M.o.ter Machinist am/Sept. ...,:. ' , • ' Morris lg, MS i . - ii• ..,. TAMAQUA IRON WO Carter & ,11.11cas, H Irrn Rat/ultra, .111,chinixtr, kr , antl. ilukera and thabler4 F. The ullscribevA are n(I receive order for all kin 2: l a , roigines.and tmerld 1 rrin, : t •= l ea, blnxt r harm( ?Mill aire4acillitlea and pincti In the lat , ineas warrant them in Ink contracts at the loNest prick Particular attention ia called to Leen 'BtPie Patent, Winding Machinery, by w, otci.hatt rope or chains run On the top: is double ways. This arrangement. It In confidently . AATe in the wear and tear of yopesi or chains, than'rice of the nmetdocry in five years; and for risk winding, simplicity of •onstructien and durability, it cannot be 'amused. We alto recommend the new ear wheel, Inc! vented by Mr. Lucien II Alien. Thin wheel can only be had at our works, and has stood the test of theses°. ral severe winters pant, trinmybkotly not a single wheelhaving biolkoken einee itatnfrodhetion We' are now platingiirimder the cars of some of Um. prin. clod IttilrOad Companlea In the conitry. We would. also ea.ll the at tbntton ofthe nubile to the Tamaqua Car Shop.connerted with the above works, ail recently ereete&tor t lothianuthetnrtruf Railroad. Drift, Frrl•4•lrt Cars and Truks,und fa inished with alt the lateit I inproseteenta.sto the Whey Are thus enabled to exe'rute work much cheaper and with more &repot eh than beret/A:we. • All work guaranteed. Pereons wanting anything In our line would do well to gith tufa call.. • ' CAUTRIt k ALLEN. April 24, '6B PAT ' Window es ..- Gold Borden. 6 and, • Feet Long'. SPLENDID ASSORTMENT NEW Pr FIX T UR E S! At .Scarly half Ciity Retail Pekes: • Can be had At L. BANNAN'S •a Call ant I 'a Rod tteekstere. Pottsville. see them. '' • AE.Q.MCED.VRICES. Wall Je"alOor Ohtaza. r lIE subscriber 14a1; a large 10t . ,0f r very chnlen Pattern!. of ' Oa I Paper. •ultable for llolla, .-- ..- - , Parlors, -Dining Rooms, Otani., ...t; I ntl. - ......, - hem and Pu talc Daildingeoehlrh ~.", k ,. „' , . ,•,.- - ‘,.. be •111 :tell at greatly redueed,,b7e e • pri , •ee. The S twit eittbraetit the " '... ... ,•, , atem and twist es teemrd Reran. Paper as cheap ei 15 relax o Piero. e- ' N , .. Ix the time for /tarsi es, for Paper Re nrlngestid rx.lit M • 111:11/04141AN'S 0.1,111 • Wiokiite awl Retail Paj)er and Book Star.. . kirl . kloEll II ANGEnB surtun VERY CUBA : 4pril 1,'.4 11. • VOL. XXXV. . . • . . . , . .. . . . . , , 7 , . ' , . . , .- - • . . .._.,... . . .. • ' . " ....._---_ - - . - -. -.------.. .I .- ~.-..-..,= .. . . . . ... . . -...- ]--. - -.C. ..-. ....... 7 - 77 = - 7 ,,= = - - -., --- - ---r",--• • . . ...... ~..:-...--,_-,---4.....--,----1"------.=--..-"•*- --r".---'.!,•..:...--••-'- " 1 „.5" --- .---• --.'"- - '. . ....... ... ,L ---_,..:, - -; -- , 7 7- . ..w.„... - -; _.. f.. - 7•. - _-..=: ,- -,.. 7 2,-=-...,..4.-,-z - _•-• .. .-. , 4 • - - = ..15... 7 - - .7 ., - . 01.....v .4- ....26 , - , -- 3.... • '-- .- . -, 11. -=_---,.....--,--- -.-;,-_,,;-.7.7. -_- .- - --,,- -- = - ...K 1.5 ~..- -:-- -• .. ": - -.7- -- -1 7 .r ~? !•..ti.t. -7 , ; ., -t - .... - -.744 '';' . ..jet - - , -4 . •;; .-- - - - -..1-...---1.-i:.----''..f-T7l--712..r. 7, - - -- -..;:- - . 1- ' - 4.'':-: ".'s'' : ' ,. .-f-X- :=1-`- . ' - ' 74:l ' 7 ' .- ' ' ' '; ' C4 '' , t . k-" - ' 34' - ''' ''' .7.-z ' -::t. - - ' "77--- T.'.. =, '.".• - f" . .... - ="..,--,71.iv----:. -4:"1----.-'=.---',..,'It,,---,.‘'-';:ec *.e.- - .-",:;4 . '': -. ."" ,,.--,•, ‘ . *7' . ....4 !.., 7. ....,_....-,_....1X4.4 , 4: , , , ,C., - - * - L, .7 .--..•-or__."'"" ....:•.-ffz:::0-'..171r,- -77-!'". -:--,.44:4,..i ,.1. ....r- ,-- f -..^ A 7 '=" - '-W '." . 'q .. ... --- 7:-. .. •,;.------1-7it--Itr.-*-:. .•_,I - .'''''..? .. .'.''''...k..... k. , ' '' -';'A..'..--.4 70.7 7--.'-'" ' l ,*-1 , •fe` 4 1..-.W.4: , - - -=' , l-c ------f --.T.Ptztr,-1.,,,-.--,,-----,4-=.i-*--=',-* 1 -.- - _ r, - _, ,-, -: -, .- ~ -;,-^,-....,...1_-..;.,,,,,-_,...„--.,,,r,_Fr-_.__l___.:;,7E., ...-,,: • .. • , r..7.:',4-;-..r,-.t .14,:.......e.,,,.. - ..,-, -- -4 , 4q - - ----- -4,• N.l, ...c.'" - - - , Ake _ 1 , -- , ,7, - .., -,,- ', - .t.,_.... - :_..- '-••••----,..,„,, ..f ±...,,,, "---r# , - - "----,---=:..r,1.:"... -.^: • 7." - -- - . , ...,. -, ---,- .. --..--- .1%...• . ' . • .......•---- ,_..,,, !'ermines of theOen & Reading R. Lyon the Delaware, at P 1 • • .• • .' Pier No. 1. I VAN DUSEN, NORTON & CO., . DEALSIS IN DRAT QUALITIES ON:. RED AND. WHITE ASH COAL. .. • - a ninnt street, Philadelphia. • OFFICES. : 53 Liberty sheet. Nor York. - • • . . 5 Dosne.street. 119ellon. M ' . . • CUMBER f COAL. Me', Ivan Agents LeitigA Coal tun/ Navigation c ompany.. r 513-42 ILL. ' tly menu- Here' hal Is, 40 pounds 1, 1 the meat 46, 0.58 of the past osurpaSsed • Eitel. No. 2. • • • B LAIISTON & COX, •• . SHIPPERS OP, TILE BESQUALITIES Or •• . WRITE ASH'. REIM Sil arid ittEMONT SCIIIE64EOI COAL• , FRAN KLLY COMPANY'S • • LAND COAL; else ' ' IIAgLETON LET HlOll COAI4 -217 Welnatidroet, Phltadehtlibi. • • OFF,IOES : 4 New street, New York, 17 Doane street, Boston.. - P 58.42 Il'6ndneex Ipy &•Son . , • pt 4tten II & co. 'ye In nn inn public. rAling MIII and in NU prepared ng front= !flat, square 1 • Plei N'o. 3. . C ' ' BAUM,. 86 . 'Cr.1 BA UM, OGLE , . 1 . . --., A„, • % thyme Arm stairues or Ncia.tivc , v7 act).A.T.., FirstA,nallty Red 'AI& Coil. se 113 'Cr/O,INA atreot 'Ph' lladelphia, 4 ; OFFICES: No . 70 . Stati:' street lon ton. m. { No. IGO Aron. way, Few York. . V 5544 • Vilcited •ft\ either a • are Sta re Peond an. E & co 1-tf . , • 'Piet. No. I'3: • :. ' 4. ! 1 HAYES & '6OISHAL!,- - - . 8 lIIPP6IIII Of ' ~ ' . 1 ,-. 1.• BED AIT\IVEIITE ASH SCHIIYLK(LL COAL. WIIARVNO.II3,• rola ittetimns D. Lehigh And SelAuyllid.l. Coal at natal'. YARD—Coctier'nartiVLArdi atreetn. •. , OFFICE-403 Walnut erect , Philadelphia. - C 3842 Shipping WHARVES for ANTHRACITE COAL, AT G ICII Delaware River„ Philadelphia: ORKS. equity 'in. now F 01.3 (low Iron h nrera rcd to al,llehment:l Ilroad; and ;.1 Iron and ' or otherbu lats. Wowing }work In gen- • • Wharf No. 1. LEWIS AUDENRIED & CO. - . ROMMEL, POTTS & CO: (206Valmit Sfreit. Philadelphia. OFFICES 110 Ilroadw:ty, Now York. • Stake Street an 4 Mer:clutope Roe, Boston; :., .' . Atitort No. S. , • 50 • REPPLIEIA &- BRO. ' - • •N. F. cur. Walrint & Fourth SUL, Philada. OFFICES:3S Pine Street, New York. ' , / nerchantel.Denk Building, Crpvideridei. . , —,— • • :' DAVIS PEARSON & CO., • - 114INEDA AND ATLIiPARA Of TDB CELEBRATED I,OGUST MOUNTAIN WHITE ASN and • SPOIIN VEIN . • , s Z RED ASH COAL • . ~ No. 135 Walntittßrek, rbiladelphit. s : ~ OFFICE; No. -33,William Street. New York. .• • - : No: ll Doado Street, Boston. • WIIARF-411tEENIVICII, DELAWARE AVF.,NEE. DAV/S PEARSON, PHILA. . - GIDOON DAM ANNLLND. . , . eesand der • rnixbed by nub! 'Obit in theirline Immediate fully' pre , a bnd lron Pumpei . mining Jand art: of eiery . aatlfigiand ' tilt Carl of ee CgrA.-311 rstiberk.4lat , mbei of the. 110 In tur'nfah h auv In the fra. MOS., e TIYOUIpt it, , 1114 • cu.i.sontlza.• - - ' , N. r.aoaDoN. - ... (' Wharf No. 3. . . . ' CHAS. MILLER & CO. • • . . 3u).0.8 iND am rails or coat. , .. WHITE ` , • ASEC, From the PINE KNOT nod MT. LAITA COLLIERIES: • ' 1 ( RED ASH, , - rom 9telr I.ll(Estx COLLI,ERIES. • ._ . CANAL LANCINGS—OREENIVICII ANDSPECCE sTs ovpr:cr: :—No. um Walnut stew, minadeipto, • April 9. 19 , . . .- 16-ly I IiARNEit, ;AIM En. .repared Iq INES, of any I ly. and Cnal ;,aswell as nery n.ed In w ke. eluting. and • can be tarn '. lowest ptlees, 'nary of any erns, and be trac,ti , . Alan. RIM from the Peach sJonntaln.,,and Pal ° mee veins. • LarTMur and Feed taken in exchange for Owl:. .1.1)W. Wll.•it. pATI Et: so N, • •• office (f Hare/muse, Itaitt+ad gr. GARRETT, Magistrqte, Cenveynneer and General Collector. - Office; Centre St.. Pottrrllli , , above Exchange Hotel. Aug. 15. 'Ea _ . TAMES J. SEIBER'r, Attorney' it: ILI JAW. V6ttsvllle, Fklinylkill County. PA. Ire7.llfire on Centre street. above the,blinere.litipk. " July XL G. BA.NCROFT, Actt L. 1a w, and thhtittrate. orTICII 2 t - rentrotiotroott, POTTSVILLE. two low the Town flail. [April 9, '59 Al'. SPAN NEY, Atttkney Ashland, Schuylkill Fontsty. I's, agent its the pnrcbase Ilud sale of Real Estatt of rents, &c. ' [Ashland. May 64;1.: , ney et Lela, Pottsfil le. Sclroylk 111 ront:ty. Va. trolca—lo Iklahantongo street, corner of Second.. Xprll 11, '6l' 154, r / AVID 13. GREEN, Attorney at Caiv, Potter . out West corner Centre sod arket street*. 9ecand Sing. Entrance on Market ISt. N. Ite—May be consultant In German. May; , '59 Etf 3.1.311.6 "ELLIS.] [JOHN T. EbILS.. DOYLE, I i • ATTORNEYS AT LA*, , OFFICE—In Madantango steret, near Centre,' Patti; Pa. • fOrtober 30,'18 44-Iy .lao. nrcua MAIL) [CONRAD Y. 011 (Ott. ITENDItICKS SHIN DEL, 'At tnrney, at Law, TAMAQUA, Pa. Having asaorl ,,„_ attil together In the practice of the Lair, all professional ' bualnesa In Schuylkill and adjoining counties entrusted le their carrtirill retelia prompt attention. 111,sy 29. 'SII )3USINESS BARDS. PW. SHEAFFER, Pottsvill, late uf the Pennsylvania State fleol%l, tni.s.nreey> exptoreol.mte,mlttes:ee. !October 13.'55 4141 HENRY PLEASANTS, Ci'v)l and 'Mining Engineer, POTTSy [GU:. , 4/mac—Centre greet, went aide, between Market and Norwegian. [August 7.:46m RANK .CARTER,Ci v i I and Min ' log Enginer, tie rveyor, &c., sin attend to outing r . 4 orlande.mlnes,itor9 plots. 4tc. Office Sneer Tierare, Poi Willei.ya.Z ' ' [Mitch 19.'49„ 12. AGENCY—For the Purehise and &leo! Real Estate; buying and selling Coal: ta . k ng charge of Coal Lauds, Mines, ke..and collecting rents. Ocoee . Mahantange Street,Pottsrille. [April6.'sB 14-J_ • CHASM. ETU. c 13:, r EORGE • FISLg eehanical mi l Engineer and' Draughiman at coda to the sale an porrbare of machinery, and to the re-building and putting up of old mschim'ry. PoriCarben,Marcb 5,'59 C 7 toßGtii. smiTli, , i , Illinling Engineer end' Colliery Viewer, , POTiIiVILLII. PENBA " December 11,:55 T Ma!wain, CiTil \and 'Mining ollnalnaer:Ashland, Pa.dittonda,tognrwaying and inglaellng Minas. ad rroytna and dlridinglpnda.raga. 1 31 lag Town tots:and all othOr bualn env in'tbo line of hlepmtrseion. Lattoraddren, Fon fl fa In grilbg O. telt u ylkill CoinlY, Va. To , :V1,1868 S-ly Pier No: 5. - TyLrit, STONE & CO., ; DE.AI. I II4IX VAIOCIE s tr , IT B O 6 0/ . SCHUYytUL a INCII O !.EHIGIi COAII4I, . GEOROES CREEK A CUMBERIMID COAL. { . 3211 Walnut streipt. Phßath OFFICES: H Waphington 12alldIng, ICe Broadway. Nfiw York. 1 • PIER NO: 5, PORT •RICII3IOI • pier . I~or 0.. LEWIS . ROWER k DA I LLIM AND lIIIPPAIL Olt COA ' Offers,tlir sale by the Qargn, the beet gryallt swot RED AND WRITE ,ASH COALS. • , Also, LEHIGH anti CUMEEELArip COA , L. WHARF KO: B, EIEIBSPED. 0111 E-318 n nkatreet,, l'hllad -I phis. • 17 o: 1 10 Exchange atteet,Boil y . 15812 DE, T. GLOP= I i VER, : AS, -Coals. . If, Boston. ' .11ad'a. . r5.0411' - - Pter No r . 9. J:I., eiSsicastiN3 • • . , 7ipicsoN & (G I I !NTT ntsor • • SCE IX= WHITE AND ALPO, 1 • ,--• Lehigh, and Bituatinont °FPI° ilS i J t 1 8 3 1 2 atlelioneu4t g. 'e s- el le l ) WHARF N 0.9, PORT RICII Olii/mgyb! =3M . . . , LEWIS RUDE RIED & CO:, ~ IrIIOLISALS /MIA= IN VI km vaarryto or • .Aithracite it Bit oila- Coals. •• :NB Walnut el t. l'hiltsd Iphii.: OFFICES: 110 Bros . dway...N'or York: - . ~,...• ' . SO StAto street, Boston. ..... .3; , . noneerAidippert from Ditat . t , e147/: ‘ • 1 i .. . 4IIIGII, SPRINeiItIIVTiI . I4; I'LETT( AlkfT/ _ -• • COUNCIL, RIDGE CO AL : • • r 59 Ei . . LEWIS , AUDENRIED & CO, 205 atr.r,t, I'IIII.ABELPItIA nO Broadway. NEW NEE. 86 tut, BOSTON, IVholotto6 , &qtr.; in the beet COALS—SR, Proprietors of lin ble of produding orcr 150,006; torsi tcd DIAXOND, (Red-Ash.) and BLM ALSO, Exklusire Agen& for the fala of oust Mountain Coal. from the Ow: C. Portia & Co., alt of whirl to Now York, rin Canal; or r l'i ars, (below Navy . Yard, Phitat ALSO. At Philadelphia, from Pie , mond. The choicest qualities of. RED. an COALS from' Sehoytkill Cornty, selee care, and shipped under ouripersonal At Elizatethport, N. hsruon *Will:ill MOULT . and From . Baltimore; The eelebratill BITU • • At Jersereity, N. • (eia Lehigh and-iforri/ fat The very superloi WILRESBARRE, ilafifmnrg. Pair, taken frcnt the "An , .megt and Cold Company's Estate," n' also, the couNcti, MIDGE COAL; steam nurposerind for family use, 'are We hol ! certificates in our Mikes. hive used and_ fully tested theie Coal' them thenrsrAirlistscrrs Coale for duelug notllnlcer. teme ashes aml great other btridg uow before thepublic. ~ . , May 15,'56 • :Franklin .13: Miner and Shipper WHITE Asn C4I. from the End LINT Colihrtes—ltit YIMOTIfk, EL AC OTPTCENti t re et wt. opposite Ephl April 10.'68 PATENT COAL T Bs. , ISAAC, SELTZER, Age( tier the Cel l:. brated-Ashlavid Coat, mined!by eaneme, Lewla Co., has removed his omen to 77 \Cedar Street, between BroadwaY and Namara street New lent, lien also the spray for the aide of Foehes Paten Coal:Tubs and block,. All dealers In Coal will find 1 to their Interest to roll and gee this new article forma! ng labor. thew 'fork. Jul 209 ,27.6 m• TRANSPORT I TIUN. PHILAD'A & READING • AILROAD. it left,, of the philada & it ! li. Co., . nitaddph , June &1,1860. The rates of Freight and Tolls ou Coal trtnepork.d by th le Company, will go an follow a t fro Ist July, tea, un til further notice: • PROM i E.E TWltielanond, I . 150 45 •• . • 1 60 i 45 6 . Inclined 1 50 it 45 •• Nicotown, 150 " oOrrnntriwn R. h., cl5O 3 45 , • ,1 4. " Fall?, Ot•Schnylkill, j 1 50145 " ManayunkJ, J jI:Q 'I 45 " Spring *MP, 1 35 J 30 " ennabellocken and Plyn 1 mouth Railroad. ;1 35 , 1 30 " Itambo'i And Potts' and t• 1 Joues'i J ' ' 130 A 1 25 " Norrtstoainorßrldgaport, 1 30 ! 1 25 " Port Kennedy, , • 11 25 ; 1 20 " Talley Foige, . ; 1 251 1 20. " Phoenliville, j 1 15 I 1 10 "Royer'n'Ford, : 1 15 F.l 10 ~ Pottstown. • i 1 154 1 10 ~i, IThir,larrille, 1 15 1 1 10 ." Bfrdshoid• ," I 100 jO5 •• 44 Rending,' .93 I' 90 .J. Between - Reading and ' Nt•bravllle, • 95 'AO 1, ; " Mohnrrllla. • • 115 j9O " 'Hamburg, - - ' l 90 " Ornlgaburg, • i 95' , , 90 By order of the Board of If June '69 244 . Ume° ot tho Sc) , Com peny,..llt ne 3.1859/ the dung? for the use of Ca CVO, =red on the fit-built; lowa and thmenfter w eontl To Philadelphia, 31anaynnk, Spring )1111, - Conshohocken, - Plymouth Dam, 1 ... Bridgeport, • Norriatown, Port Kennedy, 1 Pawling 111 Dam, Port Providence, Itoyer'S.Yerd,;- • Pottstown Willing,. Port Union, . • Dirdeboron.h, • • A Ithouses. • • 14ohniyille,- 11amburg. Orw Ipburic I.andlng, The charge will be per ton or rent., allowance for wane, u twos than twenty-fivecents per ton will , PHILAD • A.l READIN primulimals____ • . .1110,1 Z OY Yli-GlO TIT ON 1111LA/114 1858 (A Z.E. / ST i , k.„/" untilrurther notice, the folio lug Mates otYreigbt N and AFTER MAI CII wili ba charod per 100 pounds: • a . ~, ..,--,•,,. ...ra h €2! r. .....,.' ' ill; ~‘ '0 it * . . amer„za or instant, . ... ~, o t• • , QC.' 0V64 . C. ' ge - C I Dry 0 oods.Conreetionary,Booka. *4l go , lb i inmt,eigara,Vresti Meatigish,G Ike ,- • •' ' &urns, Bran , nutter, Copper,}l ,k: ar t heneramArladstuaes,Orneerlea. emP llama, Ilanlirare, Tildes , llolloi ware, . Leatherddachinery,Orsters,Oti dee &e, Cotton,Coffee,Grain, liar Tron,Le , Ito: ttexes,l44ls, ft pikes. Rice,'SSa t, reel. stens, Sugar, Whisky, &e,, : Brooms, Yin! Thielta. Guano. bllll 8 ea, Pitch and Tar, Ea lt,,gerep ima i ll ia b er and Lumber, &e., • Bricks,r Coke, Cord Wood, ClaY, C lee, lon .Ore, Untesione, Montt Tron, Plaster, Slate, halt Pilaw Nen', per barrel, - }larch :1,'57 . . , AND . 8111110 017T-Ooli TIIWCATERSIS 01' 111017NTAINS f ItLl'ALiS =nig WILL GIVE irillENlint TO 01711 11AiDEI AND.iiiniaggr ALL EATUltrk TO OUR 178111AilCV.PLICA4UILie..-ll?..Toburon. SATURDAY MORNING SEPTEMBER 17, 1859. _ iphia.--•PierS for tl H ,...-:APlior No r l. - . • JOHN R. WHITE.. : . ~. ..„ . - 5/UPPER 'by - : • sel l c;i3EL'O7E - m=xx.r.T... coal, WiIARF NO. 7, OM nicumosix i 01 , F p„.... vo. 316 Wainut.atreir v Phlladelphla. ''"' • • No. 300 West Thirteenth at., New York. . ,... . _ °either 16, oil 1 ., :,.I________ 1 D il .e r 5842 phla. 'rovideues. , • Pier 110. 10. B4NCitOFT,i LEWIS & cELEANA".46;,:iliitkiTcoat., OFFICE-421 Walnut street, Opuneretal PlinediLphla. New York Ogee-78Tedar street - Bogen 4Xllee-45 Any street. [Oct. 23,':,8 43. . No. 12. - ' Noah Stu:levant—SOL Mix:Md.—Chas. Wanntosseher, tf. STURTEVANT 8c . C 0.,, DEALERS Pt TAB vAnzurs DESCRIPTIONS OP. ANTHRACITE COAL. , "INCLUDING TOE DF:ST VARIETIES 'OP' - ... i. ' RED a SMITE ASU SOIIUYLICL A LEIIIOII COALS; ~ . ALSO. : CUMBERLAND, from the Erostbtfig Compt:oraGeorges . ' . Creek ?Moe. • 0 . ..--- . . ' ciro. 110 Walnut it rt:e6,Thlbidilphla. • OFFICES: No.; MIK !My street:Boston. • - t NO. US groadiran ear. RECORT at.; K. r,ork • airSbipments.Vout Nbarye‘ Ncit:l2 . 4elS,'Port Itleb mond, Ellsa . betbport, N. J., Sal tlinore. 116.. and 'Alex atacht. Vs: . - [April 16,'69. 16- 'Pier No. 14. CHAS. A. HECKSCHER , ek . CO., I PPERS OF ' BROAD IaTONYAIN J , BLACK lIKATILAND SU PEORIR RED Ant COALS. OFFICES: 45 Stoptli street. New York. • f•- 132,Wilnut street, Flttladelpbta. [1843 MIIE . undersigned, haying leaped the Spslog.Mouistaliii Mines, „, • • AT •NSVII.LE; PA.. hitherto worked by Wx. Moires C o.. an. now prefaced. to supply this lustlicelebrate.l EIIIOII COAL, and respectfully hustle C. F. BANDOI,PII. • ; TIIEO. V. RANDOLPH . . CHARLES Applications to be addressed to • Randolph & Co., 11l Broadway, New ;York, Room 23; 205 Walnut atreett Philadelphia; " • Easton, Venn's; Trenton, New Jersey. AND TO Randolphs' & Hampshire, Jeausellle, Pa. 41.1 y if .DOM EST 10, thiliery, f.hs csittra st,( hiIS 'Ash.) ly genulne•Lo ale Colliery of ' , hipped direct pia►Greenwich' Jansery 1,'59 , Pat Rich- CAIN,-HACKER - 80 COOK, • - A!.11:0 S,4iPPLOS OP ' MlCietzwela. Cana. Also, defilers in other first qualities of White and Red Ash Coals. 1'0....136 Walnut sfreft,rhi7gidelphia, and Woodland .Irharres. Sdruglitai. TOONAPI CAIP. ' , 7110E1113 HAMS. Juin BI.CoOK February 27.'59 ' 0.17 *LUTE. AS:11 ed with sprawl uperlutendenee. UNCIL 'RIDGE INOUE; COAL OIL) Ca/1141km the ..nrird Improve. ar Wilkrabarre; th of which, for, nsurpossql. m parties who and primo n toce eam in use, pro r blaze, ttmnany CORNER & VITTERSON t DINERS AND . SKIPPERS , ON !F.': CILL.ptIATED Locust Mountaiii Coal. I wen,. : h and West Moan IIEATIITELNB opal Church/ 15:ly 1. JONES & COLE,. AND 1311IPPEIti or TAMAQUA WHITE'ASH COAL; • ' From the Beevesdale era' Buslrrille Collieries. ',OFFICE—No. 390 Walnut street, Philadelphia. • 11 - Coal forwarded' from Nit Clinton by Beading Railroad. or In Boats by Schuylkill Canal. r.59•Al . POTTSVILLE HOUSE, • rs JOHN F. EMUS, Pxopilotori e,nire sired, .POTTSVILLE. rhs(looti Stabling prOvidett:lall j November 20, '59 • WHITE HORSE Hi darrier'e/ • Centro and Atahantrmno !Joseph DI. Fegisr, 'Pre; En terialententsitid aecommeilation l i erne best kind, aitil every attentlett will be paid by the host and Ma, ai tendante to make guests and travel' era vamfortabl. ' August 1.'58 ' 130 1 30 1 30 130 130 1 30 1 30 1.10 1 35 1 35 1 36 1a 1 35 1 35 1 35 1 Z 3 AMERICAN HOTEL. 1 ' . Chestnut, bet. Fifth &Sixth !Hsi, PAILADRLPIIIA.. ;Tr A? 111 50 - per Day. — (iXt The undersigned -having' renewed their lease Pm a term of yews, belie entirely refitted the helms, haiing painted. carpeted and refurnished throughout. The ire ration of this !locum is unsurpassed, being nyion the widest and most pleasant part of Chestnut' street.' (di rectly opposite the old State Mouse.) near • the places of amusements, the jobbing bowel; of Market and Third streets, convenient to the City „Railroad, the cars of which run to all parts of the City for Rye cents fare.— The rooms are large. well 114hted, have superior ventil& lion. and have been refurnished with a care for comfort. 1 10 1 10 1 10 1 10 1 00 1 00 1 00 1,00 1 15 J. 10 1 10 1 10 1 00 1 00 1 00 1 00 • .seey. co gatmn leara, nainken. be SP M• notice,: VIC RON _ .)Ylk u l i t NaVi .I , 4in a Ju sod fo Toll on A Hon will 1 In lber I 45 45 s 0 40 40 and Leith - el; Bose for pare., manta, Branch Pipe; and Couplingsfor pavements. Iron and'Lead Pipe of all alcoa, Bawl/I:true+ of every kind,' embracing a full assortment of Chandeliers. Bendanta, Brackets. t e.,A15..itC.. manufactured of the beat quality. A of mate rials , and of the latest and most approved pat terns. DANIEL D.3IOIIETON. April 119 15. 10 lbs., less live! par and no rharge leas 1. • made for any:dis! A LEY, Prtrideat RAIL ROAD. 22 11 • Shipment of Antinelteu FROM MAIIANOT MOUNTAIN SPRING ,MOUNTAIN COAL.' New Concern. I. F. VOORHIES, „(t CC. AND lIITITZU or I RI CZLESISATID Lewis Vein Red Ash Coal, From the "YEW DUNCAN UOLLIEItY." He mines no other Coal—which sounlres Its purify. KfireargO sales by , JOriN MAY, Agent Vim 1. F. VOO2IIIEB ho. 11 Pine street. New York Pottowille. Match 12, '59 (June 5.,1,5 22-1 y) 11- J. JiCONNER, ' J. B. PATTERSON, As/414rd, . Schuylkill County, P. r 59 274 y HOTELS. We are oupplied daily With pure', milk, meant, fruits and vegetables from a farm belonaldd to cm, and which is managed exclusively for the Uotet The proprietors of the American mare their friends and patrons., that* no pains ante apered to make the appointments of tbitl Hotel complete and its Table compare, favorably with the beet hooves in the Union. A tm. '1.9 XI Am WYATT & IiEII,INO4. - PLUMBING. eLumsigc. *rip CA S FITI INC matabissment. `"RP4SQUARN. PoTTSVILLE, PA. The undersignedrespectfully forme the ci.izens or Pet ile,and vicinity, that having rehased the Bombing Es• 'Makatea loafers ry Die k. l \son, - and attached it to his ot-Fatinynalsinus.w ill he ter carry on both branches, Id hopes, by strict attention builneskeepinpalwaya on toil a large and well selected' tock,employingcompetont lrkmen, and doing work at /yreasunertdinpprices—tore, teetee'a portion of the public Atronage. His stock will consist of Wa n. Closets, Iron. Copper and tad Bath Tubs, Porcelain atift upper Wash Basi no. Iron • add 'anent Plngs,Drsum Cocks for PQTTSVIkLE Sucklle and leanness manufactory. HEREWITH invite your especial L attentlolt to my very extensive gtock of Ready Naito Sahilery. Harness, Odtars. le.. embracing the Largest variety of styles and qualifies over offered for sale in this county, *ad at prices that will compare favorably with those of any o ther house in the trade. flaring been, for some years past., in the habit of purchasing my --4 • Rata llaterlaleadarlielyfar °fah; • I find,myselfuoir In the possesslim of adiantagra rem . this:mare not enjoye_d by the trade generally,ind feel' that I ran, with conffacere,solleit the trade Drell clams of dealers: and my derangements. for the coming sea son's trade are based upon errs a laver earnest of hue. arm than I hare hitherto done; you ran therefore rely upon !lading at my establishment everything that is re. quired in my . _. • . Orders by malt are respectfally solleited. and the rands sent warranted to give sat Whet fon. both is to arks and quality I.I7VEVER N7OSIELBDORFIT. bppesitegpacepat catrzh, (balm street. Poltscate. Marchl. 1857 , 10-1 y .• , , • NOTICE. • . ~ ' To Coat Operators &AO SC knylkill Cosa. ty Dte'rottouto. - .- • ' SMOKING „:t.913ACC0 . , by ySteam rower—nooThsalday, at Hamburg. SmokineTase• IM and Begat liWeftftri;entrnd mid ready feraale. , 200 barrelsestattarttedattiOlnii Tcharso. . . 200,000 Halt Spanish Segars.f, , , „ ....... , 200.000 Melt, Spanish Secant. ' •: '. - ' • 100.000 Seed and Nxtra Safari. . , .1 ' Orders thankfully received and promptly attended to. Terms atty. 1 , MAUI .. .ANN MOYInt, -•- • - ' Hamburg, cola Comity, Pa, • Sept. 5, '67 ' • ' - ." s= =At TRAVELING. PHILAD'A £ READING RAILROAD. Excursion Tickets,ammElMlE From Pliatdelptits to Patti& Title and return. will bxeold at Thitel4tea, en new-, ditirand Sundays. et $3 Ta Nub, good for soy 'tzein on thorn days, and'on the etieeiedina Monday. A.II.ICOLLS. General Ralt. August 8,'59 S. sPA SSAGES ubs rite BY e S a T usl A o rifea , + Frtake Prolamin" hp Steantern to and •• • • - from Europe In the dna and second classand • ar • • steerage at the 'lowest rates. A &tamer mill from New York for Liverpool on the With bat First 'tiara Pas. genitors, 1176—Thinl Clawk Car Snlnd In Pfrolstona.— Pamengers alsubrouzht out by steamers. ApPlp to H. ffANNAY, Who also sells drafts on Elwin In tans of lE.' sad upwards. March Weil 11 a t acjwa . PHILADELPHIA & READINI6 RAILILOAI) 1:81,01- 116e,F: toutblit/I.Ottli streeLx • , r.. • PRILADELPIIIA, April 18041860. t. PASSRNORR TRAINS FOR HARRISBURG. On And After .Mondsy;lBtb, instant. TWO- Pataetteer Trains will be run DAILY (Sundays excepted) to. Dar risburg vie Rending and intermediate points. MORNING LINK.. . . , . • Leaves the Depot, at Broad and -Ili. stied; at 7.30 a. si.• Arriving at Harrisburg at 12.30. Noon. - AFTERNOON LINE. • - Leaves the Depot, at Broad and Vine streets. at sick P. X. A rel vltig In llirrlrburt at 8 . 3 0 P. M. , • • Fite to liarrisburg, tbl .13 . % r./ elasx, 2 70 By order of ihe &lard. W. 11.111e1j.WER4ET. April 80,009 18-tOlst.] • &aviary EAST PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. ON AND AFTER aIisgER@WEDNESDAY. May //Oh Passenger Trains will run on this road dally.conneeting with trains at Allentown for New York, Easton and In. tortnediale plates, and at needing with trains for : Ilar , tirburg, Philadelphia and Pottsville. • Trains going Itast wiltleave Reading at 6'B. M. and 12 M.; arriving In New Bork at 1:U0 A.M. and 7 P. NI The trains vming West will leave New York at 11.45 A. arriving in Reading at 6 P. 31.. A'-train will also kayo Easton at 7 A. 31., and Allentown at 8.15 A. DI, arriving lalteading at 10 A. id. . Fares trona Beading • • To Temple, • Ol 75 'To Millerstown, $0 80 Blandon , 25 • Enntua, . . 90 'Fleetwood, - 35 Allentown, 100 Lyons, . . •• 45 '-Bethlehem, . IIS Topton, I 5 ' Easton, ,• 115 Shamrock, •' C 5 New York, • 330 'Freight traria sill also run, daily between Iteadloi and New York, leaving Reading at 0.01 A. M..; JAMES 5100 RE, Geweiil Sup/. 'Augost'l3, '59 • - • • AUSTRALIA PIONEER. IJN. •" • Established 1352. CarrAng %Its UIE . 8. II Soiling Positively an the D., Advertised. • ~ ei DAYS PASSAGE.— I'he 1./magnificent Clipper Shi OK/MENTAL:IO 40 tons Register, With' capacity for 300I} tons, trestoop, Commander, is now at Pier 11. North /Um., with I'2oo tons of cargo op lxvird, completing her loading, and will be dispatched for MelLourne direct, positively, on Than day, tzepieuiber 15th. On her last voyage the “ORIF.STAL" made :40 Mlles., in the 24 bourn, and from her site and sailing qualities, is expected to make the passage Inside 0f,75 days. She: has magnificent accommodations for drat and second class passengers. • ' • • notes of Passage. Fl rst Cabi n Saloon. $•-r; Second Cabin. SRC Children- in arms, free; over two yearn and under t Welve. hhl f price. For. Freight or-Fiohnge: apply op bverd, or to I • • n. W. CAMERON, 6 Bowling Green, New York. Sight Dills for sale; and cash advances made on Con eign mentp. • Consignees in Anstralisi §lessra..Wilkinson, Gros. k Co. August g7,':r9 • [Juno 12,'d6 21.1y] 85. - Only Directp Line for Ireland! S.rtrimlja PARTS of' GREAT BRITALVSnd IRELAND, - For $3O: afiarlig The powerful Iron Steamshirs , CITY IF BALTIMORE, CITY OF V. ASUINOTON, CITY OF MANCLIESTER. • KANGAROO, CO VIGO, Will sail from New York Oir RlCand thence to 'LIV ERPOOL, lii-Ercry _Alternate Salnrdastriall ' Passage from New York: Cabin, • • • . - $75 Third Class, • S,N) Passage Kent Liverpool and Cork: Cabin, - •kW Third Class, - • - $4O • BV.Prissengere forwanied to Havre. AntWerp, Bremen and Darnburg, for $B5 in Cabin, rz Third Clam. - To PARId (in 26 hours from Llterpool t )Cabi VG; `--Third $3B. The above 81eamshipa an, built ofikon. In waterght conipirtmentic carry each an experienced Sargeo , and every'requisite for the immediate extinction off! e. For Passage apply to R. J. Cortis k Co., 177 Broadway, Y. Job's G. Dale, 15 Broadway, N. Y.; to R. F.DW A IlDS: Pottsville: Or to ILICGARDS, ' 11.—Pasrerigers by this Line avoid the risk and de lay of - calling at Halifax and it. Johns. as the steamers proceed direct to Cork. '• [April 16,'49 MISCELLANEOUS. IAIII.,LOUCtIBY'S Air-Tight zrut Cane; Jars and Bottles. ffIHE STOPPER BEING SIMPLE IN CONSTRUCTION, and PO esslly appßed, Is the past desideratum en long wished air. and only needs an examination to convince the most ineredutomeot.its su periority over anything yet Invented or likely to be. Sold by RR 10 lIT t LItRC Q. 24 - Centre street, Pottsville. F. ALTSTATT, Picture, Looking Glass Gilt and Ornamental Prams Manufacturer, • N Mahantaugo street, between Centre and Second streets. POTTSVILLE. Pa . manufactures lain nfld Ornamental. Square and Oral Frames Alta, Lack Mit 31Ooldings, Polished Square and Oval'Frames for Pholneraphs. Wholesale and. Retail. Nngravingo. Oil Paintings, LitheArent's, and Fiend., a@illll3ll and American USAlog Olass Plates, cotuitantly on haul. nisAll kinds of Primes made to order, and Old Frames handsmely re-gilt, at abort notice. Pett se Hie, Apiii ti,"69 I 17-6rn THE HAMMON'CON FARMER -:- A newspaper devoted to Literatureund Agriculture. also setting forth foil neconnts of the new settlement of Ham. mnotee4- in Neal Jamey, can be subscribed for-at only fo'S .cents per annum.. Ineinso postage stamps tor' the amount. Address to Editor ot the /Unser, Hammonton . P. 0., Atlintle CO. New Jersey. Those wishing cheap land, of the best quality, 1 - 12 (1111) of the 'healthiest and most delightful climatee In the Onion, and where crops are Diver -cut down by frosts, the terrible PCOO tge of the north, see ad , verthtement of Hammonton Lairs. , • OTEL t " ;sums. iiagile. prletor. • . • ei TO 'CARPENTERS AND BIILLDERS. . :ICHUYLKILL C COUNTY LUMBER ta . musA ITAront — catid .7 a C t . t r h!l i r iFt e i s N ten l 9lT C e al eetabrie l hnl N e Y ni:, on itailkpad street.* peat quantity of loather of every kind and pescriptionothieb they ran supply' to Operators. Carpeorers and builder", at lower rites than It can be bonoht elsewhere. They are; also reedy to supply," through the means of their extensive' business and la. her sae' ng .ntachines, ins nufaetured articles In their line at a airing of 25 per refit. on former cost. . ' Their large storkehops have bison In sneetaudni opera tion for the peat year, turning nisi vastquantities.of Doors°, . Windeivr Fratites, Nash, ' Passel Work, . - Dlnutellisigs, - Illed.'posts, ' • Onside, llattuistern,. Shssttor,o, .. And all kinds of Framed, Pa ne led and Turned Work, Which the} have constantly on and. They are ready to ' , teems (mhos at the shortest otiee, !annoy quantity ro quality of wrwedor utanufactu d stuff. , . Dry and green Hemlock of all Inds, ilr bulldlngpar- I poses. • °A.:Maple. Poplar, ebal ' plank - and ecantling boards: Cherry , Walnut, Idaho any, ke., for cabinet Work: WhilOand Yellow Pine rds'fortlomit;,raw or made to order;. White Pine plank.. 3,2%. 2,1 1 1 1 4',,, ,N 'and ?,4 Inch panel, always ready; also, plan . beams, rails, seentling, pods ; shingles , la th, rolling latte,pall . Inge. ke..ke. trellilin of parted stuff and everything In their line on hand or to order, at the shOrlest notice. . • Pottsville, Mania 29.'68 • : 10. TheXadat Extraordinary hook col7.tho Ago. Pint Billion of 10,000 sold ia.B Weeks. ." BOYHOOD'S' PERILS PUBLISHED BY . DB. S. PANCOAST, 916 Spring Garden Street, Alsitatte/pita i Pa, And tor sale by aU Booksellers. This is a book of 22 psiges,l2:l6., bound in rioth, with NINE LITIKKHIAPIIIG PLATE, and • intended L, Parent'', Guardians and Young Men. Every young man that wishes to us detain his health and staahood, and have a 4e,affhy privsoty, amid and th is bond. Some of the itattitnents are really sAoundi or and have Deal, be. tore appeared in print. Price $l. Ey mail 4145, • / LADIES' MEDICAL GUIDE, AND MARRIAGE 'FRIEND. • This is a work or newly 000 pages, beabtifully bowed In cloth, and contains over 100 grtialdb and animus lixotuorixos. It gine a. complete - description of the structure and function of the reprodnetive organs of the female, showing how married ladle* may have or avoid' large families. Aiso,a complete history of Hermaphro ditism, with curious Melee, showing both sexes to one. It also glees advice to Young Ladles in selecting a husband, pointies out the cause of so much' unhappi ness after marriage, and the influence it exerts on the offspring. • The work also gives the symptoms and treatment of all female diseases, so that every female may be her own Physician. The list chapter is devoted to the Tort:ff. sbrini the "receipts for cosmetics at present In user by the nobility of France,Englandend puss's, for beautifying the ski n,, hair, teeth, and for rentoviag foul and preserving a 'sweet breath. They Imre been obtained at great ex -pease. . ' $l4O. By mail, $1,15; or eight additional lettir *talons. 8000 copies have already beau ordered. Those wishing a copy or the first editjon should rend their or.. dere without delay: - '' For complete desetiptlon of the work. -Prospectus, wnich Will be swot on roreipt of one letter Platen. Agents litittalatted-ileeevery town In the Upton. Feb. 24, 441 ' '•' --' • f*.ly. , P.P.RSONS _WISHING ,TOICHANGE their bootlaces to a molt* inetaseing country. • New Settlement, where hundreds are going, Where Unveil mate is toil& and delUbtful. See athertieenteut Drib(' llooscogatou iSettlemcnt i another evitunt.- MANHOOD'S CURSE." A Great Work for the Ladies; • - By the RIM Anther, entitled 'pato. MY NATIVE RIVER. tT 111121141011T0N Like as emu* veto hots the bort of the ado, Pubdnii with Joy *wryer. Ittniedveolie Isles. with dimpled smiles, Sloweth lay settee deer. .• • , Englora POO I/ it eoint 'Wog, • Unthodiky the les4tog bete, ?or be strives in Tato to clasp a ebdn O'er thy lettetlen beart r bran river! Staging to toe aslell aid Wee • - Lit ssug to the dusky daughters, , Whets the light twice like ii sea-blrd des OTOS' Its peaceful !raters; Or When by the shore of dagamons They Mood In the mystic dances? Where the lover'. vow Is shisprivil now, - • ' By the light of =idea &mem 0, whim 04 dart 4120 strike mitteart, Bpeollag from Death's full totem, Flay I close my eyes where smlllog skits Bend e'er toy ;Mite jthning. (arresionotes oft 17 . ;V i tta!to . :Rad. sad aad Nisio9 r OBSERVATIONS ABOVE AND- BE LOW GROUND IN EUROPE. • The Westphaling Coal" Fieldl Shaft- Slaking in the quicksand 1 Early Failure; lingliatt Method of Tubbing. ...Letter So. 9. -We will enter Ole Coal field by way of.Cologhe and Duiseldorf,at its western extremity, at Ml ten. .This town,'which stria upon the Chant. end which, until within:a f w years, was sup Posed to be quite beyond the region el coal, has been peoir -ed,by mit ntexperimenuti botings, to have beneath it many rich seams, which even extend Dept* the Rhine toward Belgium. These borings have furnished .the data for calculations which have led, -to the commencement of a timber of shafts in ape immediate vicinity, which are intended : to resat the coal at a depth of about 500 feet below the -'surface. The sinking lif these Anita requireetitat about 250 feet of-chalk midi andasetimming tor- leaden" shell be pierced. 'Nearly the whole tif this distance - , Is below the level of the Rhine a d the Rime, - and such - is the nature of the loose str - te, that any change in - the level or these rivers s .eickly indicated by a corresponding rising or `sinking in the level of the wisteria the shafts. The work= plated before the engineers, who a e attempting to penetrate to the coal below, I thi k I may safely. Say is attended with moranumereits and rarities difficulties than - have ever yet 'beau overcome in the experience of the miner. 'Prac tical -men hem France and Englaotl, Who-have been connected with mining operstieus in (heal own countries,' assure me that - they have - never known so extensive a bed of such treacherous ma-1 terial iti be pierced by a shaft. Even the experi, inental boring, before mentioned. wai attended! with much trouble, since the engineers were cowl tidied to protect the sides of the hole. with. irea, pipes, to pr6tent them .rem Oiling -with loose sand se fast as c4ared out. The utistaeles ere immense if overcome , in the simplest conceivable way. but they present so many poiote , which have never been settled by dina' s xperiment, that the engiJ. nears are unanimods — on no partieuler plan, but , each one carries out his own and deems it the best. Yet the prise to be gained, a coal mine upon the edge of the Rhine, where neither coital nor railway transport would be required, but where ships for Holland or for Baden, could load from the pit wagons, is So valuablews to warrant the flaking of large sums in the attempt to win it. Three nations, tlermsny.Beigium and England; are represented by as many milting companiea,wbo are now trying their skill at shaft sinking near Rhurort, within en,.bour's walk of each other.L., Each_ is grappling with similar difficulties, but af-1 lei a plan differing from both the others, sod the result of their labors, will form a chapter of : More than ordinary-interest to those who in future will, have to do with works of the same nature. i. I We will first visit the "Vulcan" shaft, which has been undertaken by an. Engliyh contraitor from New Caltie, who has successfully sunk ism shafts in this country through a formation tif. I 'huller but a much dryer character. He is their; maghly Engtish in "stlihis prejudices, discarding everything Gennep, and acting witk,mert, measly; material and precedent, brought across the ettan nel from the batikPof the Tyne. i I, I I f oun d the works a short distanc ebeyond ith . Rime ferry enclosed by a high wooden fence, an having , ;"watchman ' s lodge" built by thags:ft..-4 I was admitted, and found aman, who piloted Ms be the contractor's brother,i n charge. Addressi. log him it first in . German, Iperceived my dsire to see the operation was likely to meet with a rel. fusel; but, perceiving that he was's° English! an,' I spoke English, which produced a marked chiles* in bit manner, but it was mit until half an boot' - afterward.; when I spoke to a miner who had been to America, and was thee able to pro mt nationality, that the won threw off his re ry and began to explain his pleas-free,. "I thought you were a German who was trying .to get in,7 said he, "and they are not - welcomed here' I could not help smiling-at his. precautions when' I I saw, the day following, a denting ris shift and all his troubles and contrivadees i -the office of an observing Geiman, who bad a- fl eeted ail bit information froia,some of the` work nen, mod who could till the thickness of bliaal ' nd the six recur y of the timbers, with all the of thel en g i ps tractor himself. -We f=ret visited a shaft which, bad been sunk tit the depth of about 140 feet by the "Gleeinao Fitto n ' -which I shall describe-in a subsequent. Mantel The history of this shaft is interesting,as displa Ina an immense amount of reckless expeitditur , ; and at the same time the *ekes and unknown dangers which are connected with the wore.l -- Al ter the test borehole bat been successfullyjeut and coal found, a company put down a shaft. wit great labor, to the depth ; of about 100 feet. I ' - At' this point the Government Engineer, ;with out duly considering-the matter, ordered dust buildings should be erected. The orders were ear tied Out by the construction, alter the usual Vest phalian manner, of buildings of the most m sa=ve character.' A tower &beet 50 feet twee, sii h Otte wall 15 feet thick. for the Support of the pumping beam, Ras built around the shaft,and attached to it engine houses, boiler sheds, an& reservoirs; cov ering at least 100 feet-square. A fine drawieg en gine 'of .150 horse power was put up, and for the time Wee to answer the purposes bulb of drawing and pumping. The water was taken out and - dig. -ging commenced, 'but, the workmen -were not care ful to keep the walls of - the .Shatt protected by stone or wood, so that ',co day the Machinery gut out of order, the pumps atom. ed, and the Ishaft filled with water, end when the water was 'again! taken out the abaft pas feend to be 4 filled f0r.20 feet, at its lower end, with soft marl. The Often of the,water hal eldsted the sandy walla ta, cave in, and the .preseure of. ihe outside ma le had posited the semi-Quid' material up. into -WI open space. .. . The mignittide of the trouble did net at MIA ap pear, and they proceeded to Clear the send :out, but all that was taken nut was. replaCed by, new supplies from tht 'exterior marl beds, satanic which all _efforts a "rubbing" proved unavailing. At length the fouidation of the massive buildings begat* to show signs of being undermined,; and preiently the shaft, the engine house :and ma chinery were,vbeein, ny wide cracks rimming in the solid masonry, to be sinking slowly into the earth. At this point the Shaft was Mama( by • the English, who, succeeding in reaching the hottom, began to apply their "tubbing," but they met with a new difficulty In finding that the shaft hail been 'inadvertently sunk near- the experituentall bore hole, and that, on one side. the earth IAX - become, . by the action of the borer, as the minerireepressed it, "entirely' rettan." -, : • ' • - -i • ! This trouble, they say, was graduallylbeing overcome, when the machinery esuk soonto7 line that it was found impossible to work it, ',sold a change of location was seen tote imperative; No location in convenient proximity to the shaft could be fixed upon without its.possessing the stone Sob jeetfons which were found in the old site, sitmeell the neighboring strata were' yielding to 611 the hollow below. They hence decided to alts‘ndon, the whole affair, and a few months since this pre-, seat shaft was opened about 150 feet sOutliwerd from the old one. 1 • ~' The method permed at present was adOpted with the hope that et it - depth of 80 or. 10,0 feet they will meet with a strature which will - enable them to hdopt, with mfiation, the usual means) of timbering. keireelar opening 10 or 12 feet deep and 27 feet in diameter. Is dug,- in the sand }-pod around the interior thus formed, is set a 'rose of planks about 8 inches wide - acid • 3- indica [thick , side by side, until enenclosore likes vast Mish is formed.. The pressor -erecting upon the outside of the planks, which take the, place of the etairee , like beeping, tends to keep it together ; bit this pressure; would soon petite - too great far ',the strength, of the wood or the .permanence of a ;ch.. attar ferut,and at, a slight depth a collapse wciuld ensue, were it not for other elements of strength. Firm interior hoopronstle from good settoined osit a 7 inches square, and made , up of ['en ema about 6 feetlong. are set around the intericiee in teivals Of five or six feet, so' that w hie complete, and the moisture , bee swelled the planks, itr send 'Wen wail Is formed which resists at mien !the rnetrationof the water and the presume OC the sand. ' . . ' .. J 4, I , The first set of tubbing is new wimple 'ulit 'teaches to the depth of abeutill feet. li eider to proceed. with the sinking a second minima tenet .. be inserted. . But at this depth having *titled said and water, which will not stand as - a wail, ~. new precaution* tnestle taken. A row ef tins. liar planks are placed Immediatelyaround the in side of the first set of wooden ring., and pigtail. er ring of equal thickness ){placed aratindtbit in- Whir of 'the - second section: The: walla:tannow descend lathe battem and dig the gond awdi from beneath the plank'. - - A, s each plink has the and loosened from bet Or, • iTecond at of, workmen . fdrive it down with large hammers tilt it impair= 1 - , spinet the bottom; this way. each plank is sank separately-, tilt et length the whole real: has I, l ..pinetrated to its Nil length, when new planks and f. new rings ace pat in in the soma meaner. • That the workmen may be In the dry, and be little to use his 'hoist to advantage, th e bottom of i`-the shaft must be kept as clear of water as post& ;hie. This .11 dont by means of a` tarp steam pump, which eats be lowered b e y means of heavy block and tackles and windlasses. and new sec\ tiosti smeared on the top is greater length _is re gaited. The shaft N now about 20 feat sleep, and -; preparations are being made to sink the third let of tubbing. \ V ti 'When snts stritam" of clayey marl bee . been i reached the English metallic tubbing will be in. sorted on the interior of the Wooden walls, and the L . same metallic sheath will p• placed iittide the en tire shalt. This method:of protecting the sides of a shaft is of regent introduction here, and it has answered admirably in every lactate,. I will speak of it more at length in another place. 1 • 111.. e fßisctilann. TEE STEMBEIP OBEAT ' ' lERW. . Tux Eisatu Wexner. OF Tut WaagTe. The London'' eomapondent of the New York Herold Welshes that paper with the following interesting description of the steamer Great Eastern, which has. been I justly tidied the eighth wonder of t he world:— ~ 1 . • ' The Great &stern has been described, pictured, writ ten about. visited add marvelled at as a great "show, " .a something to me t res people in elconnt village le at *learned pig or si, two-headed tali. NO f , the bundle: e y of tide ship is a eofnmereial transact!'" and it is, im possibicito aticulati the influence and bearing that it 'may have .on the filters commerce of lb..world. If she prove a financial, aq its. unquestionably Pas a mectrani eat meccas, then we may expect several more jast like her, _or pearly as large. Some papers. erne them the Londoni Times, predicted a speed , or the ability to run, of over twenty milers an hour. That 1 outt. As she . Sits on the water mite, her paddle floafritifairly dipped in the water. and there Is no iced on hoard. either cargo. nor coals. Put twelve or fifteen thousand tons of dead weight in her, au4 she will sink some) nine or twelve feet &eke in the water, and then her ddies trill be altogether too deeplfur good service—attires& that is my impression. A trial trip, however. or a Lingle ioyage, will decide this and many other matter* • Wheti a strangeterst walks into St. Peter's church, •at Rome, he feels atm/weary disappointment because •it is not as large asks an pated. Much et this is oe casioued, no doubt; by the admirable proportion of ev erything-the statees, partienitry, the,* being thirty or forty feet in height, and just about as large in proper - tiou to the size of the vast nave as ordinary statues of Heine persons are tia ordinary churches. The spectator forgets to comperebe living people ow the floor with the cot i .vast e x panse of e four bemired fret over heed, and the immense space nd vets on - every side. But On the Great Eastern ship:it is very ditleneut, and one's ideleof magultude are molt than no:fred.. Th 6700011 and cab ins between decks, look like town balls; the pailagee like streets, and the whole like a large town or city,— There ii no single saloon eir cabin as large, in proportion to the saes of the vessel as you see on the Ordinary ocean steamers, It would be bad polil , sud s m. waste of space 1 'and money to mike them so. lie, principal saloon is illaiShied and furufrhed in a style... t sternum* the decoration,' belugi both rich and chaste • the colors, principally whiteOnd gold, enlivened with red, pink ,and salmon. • Thefheight is fifteen feet, giving one the idea of a lofty rout e r In a palace or public hall. I believe It is not over eighty feet in. length by forty in width. end In reply toe question I pet to Mr.neott Rowell, the builder, he said it : would accommodate about one hun dred Cud fifty ;willow, at dinner; but bear in mind there are several other cabins and saloons neatly as largo. ,' When we come to conelder that *vessel must be built with greabstiongth, and tha l Seholee, convenience or accident cften renders the moo tioitof some erotic . ular room or part of a room inconvenient or impossible. . we shall at once see the policy of dividing and suletieh ding the room and resources of a TIM*, this Into numerous compartments. Put is large,- propmtlun Of this ship into one long saloon, as you in other ves sels; and it would not be so agreeable; It would be more noisy, net easily kept at a good temperature; and in ease of 'wident to thjs one apartment, passengera would be without adequate protem ion or comfert. The Great Eastern It shall feet between decks, a loftiness di ceiling that hinny 7ould eonsider usele ss It; however, serves this purpose: Tne dlitance is, IS many places, divided into two "stories" by an internee dials fiefir, giving two tiers or staterooms between to two decks. But to tom prebentithe immense size of he ship, one must goon the main deck, and here Inoue vast SILOS that ean be ebrepared to nothing bat Roar There lb no poop. no "-blunt on deck," and nothing to break the grand promeeade, save the six or seven masts, the *Make stacks, thl stair eases to the cabins, and the sky lighte. Mr. It ucoll says—stsoding on nnenf the paddle boxes—"here I c nmand the entire ship." From that stand point every foot of deck is seen except the very shadow of the Mesta and chimneys; and the wave of thi hand mu be seen by the steersman or any officer on 'watch-on any jieft of the deck. Goon to the bridge be tepee the paddle{ boxes, and look:towards the bow, and lyou plea A spnee end extent equal, to that of the entire ength of a 'ed. large steamer—nearly Zit feetand then Amen your eye towards the stern and yea have dou ble the distance lit that direetion, the entire length of the deck being little short of: WO fret the width being, -If I remember rightly, over eighty feet. Your country readers will appreciate the expellee of deck as about an acre of sprface—nr 160 muse° .rods—stretched, out Into a brig 'oval. bele a -quarter of, a toile, or forty reale length. A steanier waspasaing dein the Thames bound on a foreign eoyige, and some one sung out, "Mr. Rem. 'fell, that steamet would just about make a long boat for yonr Ship." And sorb enough it looked as lilt noted be hung in the davits over the side, and not be out of pro-. portion to the Mee of the monster craft It Is only in ei.ontsi km with vast messes of human beings that the dnormons magnitude of this shiecan be 14.011: There wee on the day of the tellies!, sumo 2.500 person. on bowel. When nearly a thousand bid gath ered together foes dance on the after part of the desk, it wax not one-third covered, and them .was plenty of room to move erfiund and through, the Immense assem bly. ' Over head Ins an iwning.literally covering about a half an acre of pace. and you may picture' to ,yourself the large band o the Royal Artillery in their glittering a nilbeme, the y and expansive dresses of the ladies, with *freest huitdred moving figures In the enlivening dance, and tell the . it you can, if there ever was another such scene sin& man first beraine an_aschitect:ancl . emerged from etes, woody tents and mud huts. I have - I crossed the ocea many times in ' the largest steamers nowl running. $ have els led all of Paxtnn's glass hou ses, erood'en thi, highest minarets of Milan cathedral, crawled up the tinny ball that oyertops the,p_roud dome of St. Peter's ati Rome, marled the lofty splre of Stras burg, and. I believe, seen the grandeet 'monument/I of man's aretiteebirsi skill built in moderri times; bu , no work of human bands that I have looked at comes up. r to this. I can ennceive that money and 6/ill and 1. \ .0 could build up! these iron walls; but when I go down to the engine room and ; see the ponderous machinery that obeys the :Ughtext touch, and making the wirje mass like a living creature— Waikink the waters likes thing of life, ! . my mind fails le comprehend the achievement. Itleoks either like • miracle, or like the ereatkot of the empire tent power.. i.• . . ;• . . • , • 1 ADM the A - eta:Fork Tribune, ' • WHY T v RE TREASURY IS,Exprr. Some tine morning- during' the coming Winter, Con gress mq exact s a call for money under the name of a deficiency bil l . These bills have been annually growing „larger; so that`- : knowing the chronk propensity of this Administration to waste money, It may be announced beforehand that the next wilt overtop any of its pied.. ewers. Yet In the face of this increasing detkieney, an impudent pis:team or economy Is set up by the dB- Mel organs of tae party. A few loafing clerks are dis charged from eitinstotu Rouse where for years they have. been mere pert k sae supernumeraries, and credit la taken tu fur retrenche t.. Almost in the seine breath the Stan darts enacted Utah of selling 700 valuable mules at auction la a neighborhood where there are. no buyers but such as it bad been prearranged should be there; end then givink , them sissy at less than half pricti7 , -" , Viten Iluctuttera came into power there were $ 3 49 0 60D 0 n t he Treasury, yet in , ten months it had all , dings- T cd, end p 0,000.000 bad to be borrowed. Night months afterward another $10,030,009 were borrowed, mud five month's - later another $10,003,000 were had In the same way, hr $93,000,000 In all. But on the heel, of this came the further demand for $30,000,900 with which tq *teal Cubir,testing It spathe apparent that had the Tnnuntry unharkily contained the *threes - id wooers Means would have been found to use it In the accom plishment of that nefarious project. The chances are that Congrees hill be askitt at en early day for earn a suit as will Well the public deist toe round slooi 1,100100. Whether a House of Representatives will be round pliant' enough to grant that demand remains to be seen. get with all this tOimexuse sue of money the iloverumeng' nutietains - hers shogling.and beggarly estates:me. '• It keeps Its itendhlatere water only by the .uneapeeted no eelpt of dutie,lun impels which are destroying the Lao- dusky of the People, and Se hichthave sent gold out of the country tins year In a ;continuous stream at este of $65,000,n00 per annum,lor 630,000,090 mark than the previous yearesud NX,0001,900 more then the disastrous year 057. h4W if the export, of that year precipitated such it [Ashy -*hot consequences are to follow the death elfstblia Theamanagemeet of the Post Office is a mar ittl to Owe fipple—it would ber disgraceful even 'ln a despotism.ts many places the people who py large nod ample Fuchs for postage sreu eut off from man radii- Mei, and are disowned to either carry their malls them selves or do wlthout them That Department ahneles along, a teens !financial cripple, by Issuing scrip for its dksies t and th kis scrip, le peddled among the tinwpchan. gen, and couttemptuotultshaved at - ..1) per evint-4. grave =doubts being Unattained or lts legality. - Shifts and ex pedients of thrlous kinds, unworthy of the power cod ressourres of the nation, are resorted to to keep it In me- Rm. some Of them alleged to be so grossly illegal as to all fiii lave: Option by Congress. Let the Imports only fall back to where they stood a year ago, and the Treas ury Is at mud bankrupt slut there Ire many other ways by which ;the pubile Motley goes-than willing mules at half-price in 17 tali,- That strokeo Anattelering resulted la a single loss- There are ou tl ets through which gold runs from the Treasury all lus year round.' The whole resetionconer *tug system its a atupenduous sham. When llf..Cobb was called off by the Senate to make a clean breast of it, and say how many loafers he keptin Ids Cask= Rouses, bow much tunney these fellows eollected,and bow tneeh they got fur doing It. he was compelled to acknowledge tbataz Wilmington. Delaware, the suss collected in 1657 was $.2,004 .si, to do which be employed eight men, ashore /mink+ amounted to $15,645 35—a dead loss of nearly $14,000. At Annapolis, !bur teen, ardimt as a' ' Southern eon could make them, were kept. painfully busy a wbulipyetr In reenacting $374, for whkh they re ceived $OO3. fiat tierakoke, North Cerullo*, sB2ltere col bitted at a cost of sl.lklo. At Port Oxford, In Oregon, ft 81 were cliectst by two stout, ablehodled 'men. who reet•lred the. umigniSca r ot sure of $1,702 for this 'retrace ' dinory elfortt At Monterey, California, the amount. col lected insetted the sang 'um elf $l3, hat It required three men to pettona the fest. They performed a much peer , tor one by' &Awing salaries to the amount 0f.57,050. At Buffalo, la this Stote,slo,l4o 13 were collected, tot Width laborious sertke ten men melted the comfortable twin of $16,595 6. , ' - • ! Whet kin of man mud Me. Cobb be" to linger Muth atrocious *biases le these to go nurvioratadt . Doubtless be Is notria Onsibbs for their original existeneS—theee leeches may have been hanging to the publics fiat when' he assumed Ogles. at be angered theme- to, continue until the tall f ISt:tate laritevered their atrocious Owls. • Nay, he we no Ultimo, that be halt' ever stop pd this del to robbery of the public pitons, nor any that is sotriontinted to the present hour. Of what avails it that duties erimparip Mr up In a Waterton. If the money is to he squandered - la this scandalous .manner. - [tare are only 61i Culvert flosses shins glues recelptiardll2,64ll 95,0 collect *bleb cods $44,779 sn, thus making a de - Alone of $4lBO 04.6 There most he " gross. toff. Itsi; Phi/M*6lllp iteroliud - 1* title thalocrof ws " •° ' Pumne money. .:' Th Le Verast of coon meet have - gone into the proketts of the bunko and whippersin 'whom the ilderisiodiWdon neugwhirres retain to esny idectlous. .We doubt maths west Reneger Represente, Ilives will alieveree a thetii , b of sielesulag tillainies. pone. led In cuainctieu with- the rldiadelphia miviTard, t .-..,:.,•,,,,,,,,,....,,- SiftAftilltifiTlNGAFFlCE. f 2 " ' Mote 'proton , ' thrOoPratooooro aro sall4rrpare d taixotittoi4Uol Vat BOOK NUN= IWO !Woo chard r alai at tboollboot lasaaa' Jonsas,etiospor tba Ulna bodoimiat *ay othotztablioloostiatko moat mak as jonto,reajatteto. Waif &Wig.. • toyFlKtas. Railroad neketo. Mad thltt ' Poperaatts ArticloottApotattat. ftateDooko, Da: math „ Ordlphoti. sec., At tho ow, r tN Oar stock of . I QBrakls mato vitalist** that that aoi o th er talloo t sift tlati of ilmeatati,ait rs ki4pho6lsomployedoaptesoli totJobbisit. Soh; a proeittca I Motor onnelf. as n ill guaraatoo out work to to-as oast as 507 that tam It al ;rood ()atilt nullities. :PItINTIACI IN COMMA doss at tat stiottost Rothe., " =llli • ROOK BINDERY: • • • isookirbound la oiery atatyle. Mu e t 'Tory doeriOtke laaaitcastural,boaa4 *Ra 114 a order a shortest velar. NO. as. Just Ilrerketta to eleetkee. With waste Bke We La a stasis departnotat et Govortiltott oiaillavito pa. pie should be felt at the usagalted• of soy defidow bill to to sutodtted to Conroe*. But lie mai format oatrarsaaaca obey be two to weary departasemit,Sad selft, oo doubt, be hereafter detected when It toy not ameba wren suspected. Seery lavestlaatke ao Ike kis diva. coed Ito wallow& ' Mot Ilex% Congress willoostafs - than one Bakal's , . strong 00 00dh t* PIIPPI• with lbe ; task of oursillag the liktdeei aboaaluatloos of tits' sow ors that be, and of tau* shoorin why the Tressorp , "leapt), theti Itrtopitgaitoo,,puAad with proper* otap make "ego illostrkeal paratosiges sues tie thitrooosouttoi to take aloe. , frren the Cinte/and ilestat, A EICTIULOIWINAZIr C r eparegkied Aohientare- 7 4 Ottes/anci boy 'Wes . from hie Parente sweaty-six years'arby Mao . d 4, hai d .....-Hi s arfeesterre- among the Sweespi Tribespf the .Northwest—lfs lives amass dm „fedirlice near* Arctic regioesnree floamanii - mites Of travel. - . -_ One of the most estraordlna 1 inanities!! tau no have had the fortune to relate Jost some under oar notice. - owa It was told ns by the e ra himself, and the elfmost rehl Da Intntizatkla tato shake the troth of the story. astonishing as It mosy'seent to two 1 If the, t, ill any deception teethe ease, we tall to see Its ottileet. i About twenty.sti years am. some Canada Indiana were in Cleveland and did acme trading w ith the lpe,7 pie. In the•tearse of the trade the Indians fancied they had been cheated, and. In order to nresoge tbast. wises, Mole a three year old boy from the dty and ear-, vied it on; to Canada. As ter as can be learned theehlld was stolen from a small brown house, bat In what part . of the city, or any (rather partkishasi of Use thin am. to ot be , learned. The captors kept the boy In Ottpala OW. 4 anr ;um and then. fearing his recovery brshe emus, said h . , to a party or Pottowotamiee, who kept him about a month. Byltiiewbe was again mold to the Paw taw. In,which tribe be remained a month, but, es there Wen come fears that he would be traced and taken back by the whites, he wan traded off lathe Wlttosbagose of Il linois and Wisconrin. .. now lour be remained In the keeping of 'this • tribe has not beeu ascertained, but be was eventually trans ferral from them to the (thlppswai of Wisconsin, who again soldlilm to the Sinus Indians of ktionamia. ' T oventy.dve years *Crbs was sold by the Chippewa* to the Snakes and 'Copperhead; of lows. When this tribe removed to Missouri. he -accompanied them, and afterwards went with them in their migrations thrones ' California and Ormon. That portion of the tribe with which beremained boll) proceeded as Ow north as the Russian possessions near ilehrittit • Stralts,;and these - With portions of the' Creeks, blahs. and otber'large bands of Indians, they at present remain. Their psis elpal point of settlement le strut three bnadred~milea from the north Pacific Ocean. sod about twenty-Nashua &ad miles to the northwest Of St. Paul. One of the points in the Russian territory whore tbi tell e occasionally visits Is .11usislan Sort," whis ks laid dowh on the map as nog/ the Colville rivet. T hailMO of this strange adventure says the bet Is In the teems-. dist* vicinity of a small river, the mimeo( which, other than that given by his tribe, he doei hot know. 'The Soaks and Copper Ilead Indians trade with dt. Paul, having a seralanocal train to that place:: The . train has about two thousand Indians. One party starts from St. Paul about the same time that the other Matta floss their hunting grounds, time meeting about 'half way. The fare are packed on ponies, *lke and dogs,. • Oa their last semiannual trip, the hero at these ad venture+ received a pus from one of the Chlets—"Ya co-eheara wa"—to seek oat his relatives. and. Itiound e to remain with them awhile. The pass requires' his pre sence In St. Paul at their nest trip In iNI. Seven of-f the tribe accompsole I "Nio-koslcqualus"—fbr that I. the Indian'utne of the yontot men—to Ching*. Prom that place be has footed it most of the way, and arrived here' yeeteni ay. At Firmont his features were Wog. " veiled by a man u bearing a strong reremblanos to one ' Joeeph Todd, who is said to have 'added in Olavoland about thirty years since. • ' For some . t Ime since the 'young akin haw ben diligent. ct ly engaged In I rarincup his history, and abet its hay* • . given sivire is the result of hie Inquiries. Us says be has no desire to Irv. his Indian aseeelateains he bat a wife and too children among them. He sprits XaltUsh well, having le trued It he rye, In his trading at st. Paul. Ile amps that blot hair was cut, and Ms clottisi changed to conform tatybita usages, beim learlal Pt. 'Paul . We bare Riven his narrativodi be told it to as this morals": It rents extraordinary. but a glove and rigid erossramlnatlow failed to shake his story In the least. An far as' we can learn, his account or numerous minute details of the,boantry and manners of the far northwest regions does dot dlifer from the beta. What motive there is for derrption we cannot see at present, as' be only desires inlbeenelon as to his parents. Hole slight ly made, speaks rapidly, and Vat moment suffering from ophthumla. occasioned. he may., by sleeping without his customs'? blonkete. Healy. that an anon as be, RllO Into the woods to search tot roots he eau core himself, . Perhaps some of nor older twitters can throw some light on the subject of the alleged stealing by the In. Mane, and whether this"whlt Indian" is. not the eon atone Jeeeph Todd. - Tea Clerman — Republitams of Wheeling. Va. price a muskel,serenade on thilolth ult., to Fenster Caldwell, who lives three miles ands half from Sheehy, to signify the great *reiteration which it gave tbem tokens of the lionoratle-position which bad Wee moony leildered him, and which sIUI more honorably and moth* ha had accepted,io the ranks of 'the great •Repotollaids party." "No, wonder,"Amid the Senator, In reply, ktitat row Germans. and other laboring min, reel an Interest to the progress and In the final aseendersey of ths.prinelplect of the Republican party. 11 la emphatically the . party of the white laboring men °tibia emootri. While the Do. =mettle party is the favorite party of the atistemalle . element In our government ; while it promote/Ith* Inter est!' and Allows the dicta of the oligarehltel bodyof Southern alaveholders. to the prejudice of the Interests of Ilea ',bite workingmen, the Republican party him made the !Narrate armor workingmen; of our small pro dueers in the soil and In the worimhopa, Itelhogresestal balls. It was a puzzle to him how any man who wrought 'Ph hh hand., and who valued the dignity of the meat of hp brow, could waver In lila chase Wawa the' ptiti eiplelakof the two parties. Free labor never could bar honorable, nerseackuld command that respect, to arbleh it was entitled, while ever it was discriminated agaluld. as between It and slave labor. Whenever it was &gra did to the level of compulsory slave labor, or as It bad'. boon by the Democratir party, subordinated, It meat • partake of the degradatkm of elms labor. Remy matt I ought to be *hie to see this. The great principles of the ; Republican party were the mute that Henry Clay bad contended for to his life time, via: encouragement to k the taboos of free white workingmen, whether tillers of , the soil, mechanics, or manufacturer*. So plain win these facts. becoming I o the iyes of the people. and so tired were they new of the dies/tem and peostratiose which have been brought•upon. the Industrial interests of the country. through the principles of the Demotions party. that thex were about to rise up In thekstrpegth , and hurl their Appeasers from the plates whith they so, • unworthily ocepided.'• • • After the company had partaken of a bountiful calla- k Non, they adjourned to the resldenee,of M. R. W. Nor ton. hard t,.-who made • fey remarks of the same pa eral tamer thoseX lir. Caldwell. . Scrrtr or Coen.—M. De Carnal, one of the greatest owners of seal mines in Prussia, in • statistleal -work on. coal dixeing, states that the quantity of coal dug in 1857 amounted to 123.- . 090,000 of tons, a mass w,hich piled, up 6 ft. high, Would 'corer a geographleat square mile. The landifrom which the coal is procured, may be es Limited at 8000 square miles, and the mean depth of timber's of 'coal at about 31 foot. The mass of 1 1 " coal, then, known to exist would form a cube of 10 miles. If we compin'this enormous bulk of coal with the quantity annually 'consumed,. we may conadeotly affirm that there is enoughAe, 1 1 last for 38,000 years. The calculation of 31 for the mean depth of. the beds is, perhairs too' law, for the coal fields of Liege extend td 55 ft., those of. Staffordshire to 151 feet, sad those of , Ruhr to 134 Tee. .The coal dug in 1857 amounted in value to £37.p0,000 lterlins, a Mm far beyond tbrq realised by the digging of the precious met als. In Ertgithd seats, calculations have been `made with regard to the yield of coal in our dim country, according to which the coal nada of , Great Britain yield 63,000,000 tons of coal per . year. A better idea of the immense commerce of , England could not be formed than by stating thi fact that at Manchester and ilk environs a motive steam power equal to 1,200,000 horses is constant ly maintained, to - support which there are eon.. slimed 30,000 tons of.eoal per day, or 9,500,000 a year. In the -manufacture of nit alone shout 3000 tons are conierned per day, or 950,000 ayear. and the manufacture of gas absorbs 10,000,000 tons per year. The Trantuttlantlo steamers from Liver pool and other ports consume 700,000 tons per year. The export of coal from Euglaitd regehed, in 1858, 6,078,000 tons. It la estimated that Eng land aline could furnish enough coal for the oolc sumptiOn of the whole of Europe for 4000 years.' —Loadon Hitting Aaron/. NOW SUS EARS'S IS PICOPLID.—The Dilator of Misdeal Bureau of Berlin furnish,' the fol lowing carious statement .1--"..The population of the whole earth is estimated to be 1,288,000,000, : 7 -Europe, 272,000,000; A5ia,772. 000 .90 0 1 Africa, 200,000,000; America, 5900,000 ;/ lad Australia, 3,000.000. The population of Reaps is thus subdivided :—Roole contains 62,000;000; the. Austrian States, 36,398,620; Prance, 36,039,.. 364; Great Britain and Ireland, 27,488,852 Prussia, 17,089,407; - Turkey, 18,740,000; Spain, 15,518,000; the Two Sicilia, 8,010,922; Bowles and Norway, 5,072,820 ; 8ardinia,4,976,034; Bel glum, 4,607.066 ; Bavaria, 4,517 , 239; thi Neth erlands; 3,487.617; Portugal, 3,471399; Um Pa pal Stain, 3,100,000; Switzerland. 3,494,500; Denmark, 2,468,648. the Chinese Em pire contains 400,000,000; the But Indies, 171,- 000,000 ; the Indian Archipelago, 80,000,000; Japan, 35,000,000; Ilindostat and Asiatic Tur key, each 15,000,000. Is Maria, Ilse United Stares are amputed to caftan 23,191;876; Bra sil, 7077, 800; kfesittei, 7,661,520. In the ma rat notions of the earth there are 333,000,000 of Christian*' (of whom ; 170,000,000 On PSPIStS. 89,000,000 Protestatts, and 76,000.000 followers of• the Greek Church)., -The number3-of Jews emounfe to 5,000;000; of these 2,8900'50 an in Biro" 'is r-1,250,000 in European Itaoste. 063.- 304 Au Austria, 234,248 in Prussia, 102,116. in other parts of Germany, 62,470 in the Nether lands, 33,953 In Italy, 73.995 in France, 30,000 in Great Britain and 70,000 in. Turkey. The fel loners of various Asiatic religions are estimated a "600,000,000, Stabomedens - • 160,000,000, sad "Heathens" (the Gentiles proper.) et 200,000,000. —; , Fsent the Load. Practical Makonies Aurae& .-jEgrorhe Rev. T. W. Iligginsoni'of Worceder. gam. was victorious la • wherry match atf. Pi geoa Core, .Roeirport, Mass., it Int days ago.— The distancai rowed waa this time one miTs. hest two in three, a lady to be earriettinkbe boat dur ing the first trial.. The setae tioalietliora as took part in s preceding regatta, In 'kith' Mr. 1111- gluion was.beaten, entered, but two beam out, of three were won by him. Time---T.411, 11.511; T. 20 —remarkably foot, if the.distenoe 'was correctly measured, of whisk the cempetttors .espressed some doubts. tbe greekt..!'granary! of. the North. west, bas 88 agricoltsral county sooleties; , Now York ; Indiana 76; .Psenityleattia 68; Ohio. 68; lowa 46; Illassachtuttts 44.