,434.118114' .40111t11*. . ' • -:- , -•-- -- .• , .. . . . -", a , - - ............—..--11 ..----..- ...me.....e45. riri P__ 2 _-:' • • - . , .1r a ta, ipayabra la iotreare- -,- .. - .: . • . thin e - months -and Illit - 50 if • , , , .. - -.. . • __ - ... , •0. . , . _ .... • ' --..-. .;,,..... -.: '.• ''',....;-,'"-*•-•.:,-':, \ :1 4t, , : :". , : ,,, ..,- ,.. ... ' , : .:1 -_ . '': .': :'..;•• ...::: ::-......,::.:" .., '' I- . .:.:. ' .-...... • TO Mtn: ' " rose, (la :rue%) . , ..t3 ) .: .. , - . ... •,-- • '. „ . ~ .-,- .- ' - _, • . ' _ .. . . _ • • - II mast be Inv i arlably veld :la ed. - •• • . . ' . . '• ' ; ..' - "'' - ' ' .i. -- ' ';' ------ :IL- ' - 4' ''' -- : .... .. • :. . • - • - ~! • ; : i awl= ' t. • ' . tile e.‘wrirges: , '- • ' . •- - . 1.• .j i 1•11-1' foraiiihed ty carriers met others . . , - , - ... . . . . . , . ., , _ _ , ...- . .. . , . . . ...• , ' ‘ ,l A (...kr ' • • '' . • ' - ' '' " 1 1 -1 f . , Oil -‘, ...... - . TFF. 00l rearAer;sappiled with the . . - ,- - .... ,- , : . , ' .......-- ,--,•• . - r r AND . ~. 0 . G l ~ .. • _ v: .. ..., .. . . .., „_ _ , . •4.'i-f--- , .-- -, .. '4l`;' - ‘ .ee. • ' eiv imam. '' ' • °' , ho d meontinuenee of their nee's.' may athlete tamed them wall i t . • I' _ • , / 1/j/../.TP.CIt 10 , 17 . T9 PIERCE ?lug Bowrgut or,ing KAATH,,ANI . i 11111NGTONT /ROY THE . .CAV . itatis .. or NOTTIITALBS, .11D2A14: 111711:11 NILL . , OM: 11TDESG_TI; TO ODD DPW! AND 11112111 , DOT . ALI! NATITAZ TO 01TA us . le LED ii:t.zisine . r.. , —Dr.„ToAnsos . tor to to take their iirarspa. , dile they are directed, they are --- 4-. _____ they here settleA the tills add _ ___ _ ..% -,- ' _._`_._ . _ led. 1r lthr TagF ßl 2,...H r SS oxyou .. Din n ar,L.lli Per To • i with' I . '' - t 2 3 P cot withlu the Teat to one nitin c otojell tO Otiu - Ttre r d o do teren do ' ,d, d o fop o obsenptiona and put to one t vo ea= j o rasat will be t ..: * o r 100 eAnkiwtt c 4,3 '"L ., •Crer.iingfn and 7 „,, s t adrau Pr" — Tot 1.1111 ~,,oherribera r to tl toe publleber t rs.:•e 4 are paid. '"etilbera neglect f '` 2 % th e elliee to 1 0 1',p .00sIle until them b dlseontln wribtre move to other places !without Intwming iro , pa oo . the y a a n r d a btheled n r e ee w p i onepbae s : aant to he former fte courts have decided thatietusing to take neweim. S trom the Mike. or removln and leaving them an. k prima fads evidene Intentional fetid. RATES. OF ADVERtISINC. pee square of 101ines, 50 twits forpnelnsAtku—sub• „,ntat 'unthaws, 23 atotweseh. 'II nes; one time, 23 nosetubutquent insertions, IVA tents each, All ad. „Awl:swots own 3 lines, for short pirtOd*tharied as • rj aare• g evita• oxit. two... twcuivrt, wee lines, 63 as $ 1 ,$ 2 25 - 15 00 Imo lines, •60 125 ' 175 - 275 400 ps lines, •1 00 '1 50 '2 00 300 '•5.00 Fir lines,. '1 25 .2 25 - 260 400 600 Sten lines, 125 225 2-70 450 700 tiChilloefiv 125 225 286 . 600 600 ? ape lines, 125 "2 25 .1 - 00 •6 50 900 • sti ovum Mg trails COOrille AS A SQUAT. tif TRW SOUL pas square,, 125 22S 360 600, _ 10 00 fro *quanta, 225 400 .. IS 00, 900 , r 14 00 Three squares, 3 50, 500 • 750' •12 00 •18 00 par squares, 450 600 ' 8 00: •14 00,- • 2001 (patter col., 600 900 .12 00, 18 00 30.00 v,i'llvarger Entice fpr short periods, as per agreement,, eo-Bosinees Notices: sl.each--acti9npaciled with an - sdlea.lscolent, 80 cents each. • - Aivertleementa before Marriages! and Deathe; 10 rents r line for first Insertion—subsequent Jnsertiops,s 4,4 line. Nina wordaare counted sea Oman advertising. Merchant* and °theirs, advertising liyilur year. with ebances.ind a !standing advertisement not exceeding 15 lines. mai be cbargedjueluding eubentiption, $l6 00 ,ipare to the amount of four squares, with e . ban. co, and subserlption„ ' ' . 20 00 Without changes, at the - rates distguited above. ' Advertisements set in larger type than usual will Le charged-10110T Cant. advance, on then prloee. Ali cut. will be charged,tbe 'ache, as letter fiefs. ' Trade advertlseMente received ,from Advertising .Agentx abroad, except at 25 per.cvint. advance on these prices. wiles, by special agreement with the publisher. Marriages 25 afar' each.. DeatheaccOmpanied with no lievet.2s center, without 'notices, oixcharge. All notices, except those of, a religious character and for educationaFpurposen..wilt teschargea 25centalor any n umber of linevundar 10. Over_ 10 4;4,4 cents perliiie • Proceedings of meetings, not 'of a general or-public character, charged at 4 cents per Iltivf,for each insertion. To facilitate Calculations we will, state, that 328 lines ratite colnmnT4tii lines a half column—and 82 garter column. 2052 words makd a column-1476 a half column—and'TSSA quarter column. All ,odd lines over eveh square, charged it the rate of cents per line, for one time, 'and 8 cents per line'for three times. Yearly advertisers Must confine their advertising' to their own business. Agencies for others..sale of 'Meal 'Estate. Ae., are not lneluded to . husln'ess drertlveme'nts. MEDICINAL. 0 WIOLES EPTING WHALE AND RETAIL . . Oktenum.iliest. EVXL cll. 11:Ihrezeigl. ant. :S. E. Corner Centre and Norwegien Sts., koTTSViLLE. Jr 4. LT:A PF.1111.1 % Wel:anted “Worcester shire Ssince,? o conatant4 on band. ' • March 5,'b9 • , • ; SANFORD'S • , Liver•lnvitoratof • HBV.Elfit DEBILITATES. IT. is' Compounded Entirely. from - Guns, and has become; in ;established fact, a /tandard Medicine, known and, approved. by 'all that lure used it. and is.now resorted to with confidence In silthe diseases for which It Is recommended. It has cured thousands' rwithinlhe last two years who bid given u pall hopesl 'of relief, as the numerous unsolicited certificates lal...'my pdsression show. The dose must he adapt e 4 led to the temperament of the individual Viking, it Mind used In such (leant', Vol a% to act genlly Op ,the 'Rowels, Let the dictates of your 'judgement guide you In the useof the Liverin..—“vigOratoi,lindit will eurt.Liver Couto:lint R, .111 I. ilou. ' Attacks , Dyspepsia, Chronic Martino*, Sum eg,iner Complaints, Dysen tery. Dropsy,. Sour Stem t' , ...lich.fhtbitual.Coetireitess, Cholic.Chol era ,Cholen.leJillcirlins. Cholera Intan. turn.Flatulence,Jaundice. „QlN:en:de . IVeaknesses, and c]q he used succoesfull3 da . ordinary Fondly ftlAicine. It will . cur. p,lSick Headache. (as thou. 'bonds can testify,) in 20 ~...iirninutei,.lf two or throe teaspoonfuls are .taken at -4 „ commencement of attack. tf-eY- All Who.iase it are No i:tiving their lestimonYto Ile favor, • - Pg!! a * * * * Mix Water in the Mouth with the Inrigit - ra ' tor awl mallow Loth tojether• . • • ira-Pr1ce.......0ne Dollar per Bottle...V:li SANFORD'S Faifly , Cathartic Pills, COIIPOUNDED from Pure Veget ahl., Extracts, and put up.ln Glass Cases, Airaight, sod will keep in any The Family either TPILL Is a gentle but •, . active Cathartic, which the' 0 ;proprietor has used in his prictice more than twenty The ronstantly Increasingt!idemand from those who !melon; used the Pills,! •5 i And the satisfactlanwhich all express In regard WI itheiruse, has induced me • to place them within the l ,lreich of all. The Profession well know' dly that different Cathartics act on different portions of X Abe Dowels. The Family Cattail rtic,•,a PILL has, with due reference to this well estalei 61' jilshed fact, been cont. pounded from a rarity ottoilthe pood Vegetable Ex tvicts, which act alike oul`• every part of the alimen tary canal, and; are coot' , land SAVE In • all crows where aCathartic is needcd.l V such as derangements of the 8t ore ac h Sieepirmr. Paine in thn Back end Loina.Costiveness, Painandig - Soreness over the whole body. from sudden colds.!•r which frerjuently, If ne glected, cod Ina long course; U:1 j of Fever, Loss of Appe; tile, a 'Creeping t , 'ensat ler; tpf Cold over 'the body, Itostletemdss, Headache, oti . ;weight in the Head, all. ltittamrentery Diseases. Worms in Children or Adults, Rheumatism, at P e of the Blood. and many diseases to whichesh IF it r. too numerous to mention In Ibis advert! ent 1) . E-1 to• 3. aPrt Dimes: at , *orb° mrEzt-r VJGOR:.4 TO It and FAMILY (L 4 THARTIC PILLS re retailed by Druggists generally, and sold trbolosal by ttie Trade In ell !aria towns. • . T. W. Sanford, 1,14 ; ll., ' Manufacturer an Proprietor, 336 Aroadway,-.Y. 1 - o.lo.alled In Pidtwville by SAVIOR ; nud In Tam • qua by F.. 1. FRY. ) [Septi,loi '33 3N y ' ,McLEAN'S . greglhening Cordial and Blood' Purifier. THE GREATEST REMEDY IN TILE WORLD! This . CORDIAL 4 , 11 MA-from a Ito town.only to myna ehetnirallY e" Ined with pothebfr oat valuable meth ti roots, herbs, at Irks., known to ilnd of man. viz: loodivot, Black ram tl d Cherry Dar' 'allow Dock. Dant ons, Sarsaparilla, 1 •r Flowers, with of prOdueing mat infallible remt r the restoration ealth ever known. It is NATVISc'S Dog nneSni,.esuring ral laws. • When takot.itit heslii,g I morning through every whit n( OM Lod accelerating.t be circulation of lite blms any bilious matter In the.stomach, and whole oronisation. . r Metres's Strengthening Cordial will ;Liver Complaint, Dyaptipsy, Jaundiref vous Debility, Dierolses Of the Kidneys; aching from a.disordered. Liver or Stn i Inward Piles.' Acidity or Sickness of 1! nom of Blood to the Ilea& Dull Pain the Head. Palpitation' of the'lfetirS. In the Stoturteb,Sour,Etoltations,Cho Feeling wlien Wag 4ovett,fityness or Skin and Krell, Night Sweats,,/saws the Small of the Bark, Cheat or Side. • Ilett, Depression of Spirits, reiglitful Destemdenry, or any Nervoun-DiseSseJ on the Skio. and Fever and A gurqur It liil l oho cure diseases of the Die' such as Seminal Weakness, Incous Strancuorn.lnfammation or Weaknet Mettler, Whiter, Le, There I. tao mistake sabot dial will never fall to cum any one of if Latch per, direct lone on each bottle . Itch And French. Over half . a maims rif Wats hay 'the pot' ix monthly and in no Instate giving entire catietiction. Who, th,o, nevi. or Debility, AsheU,,WStran's will run, you.? Tel line Ladles,—.l3o . you wish; Ftrong Then go at Once and •get Strengthening Cordial: It will stem rate your blood to Bow llunngh every i Mgr blood, of health to mount• to you Every 60 la warranted to give entilf For Children...-We fay to ply {Vet! are sickly, puny, or afflicted al 1 , alant among children, give them a I Ilelman's Cordial, and It will mak • and robust. Delay net a, moment—t be'rmvinerd. It.ls delicious' to take..- chant should not leave the city unit supply et McLean's Strengthening, idly. bemuse it always cures. 'A ll I made to those who buy to Fell stain • CAUTION I--Beware of Drug may try to palm upon y n 0.01:110 Olt trat i gwhich tbcy ran buy cheap), as . Avoid curb men,. AIM for f' rstao towntal., and take nothingelse remedy that will purify the blood the same time strengthen the system One tablespoonful taken every me , , certain preventative:for Cholera, Ch • low Fever, or any prevalent disease." Prim 0n1y,91 per bottle, or six bo f. , le Pr4iletor of the Cordial; e. 011 Liniment. • , .•,, , Inc Lean's Volcanic 011 Liniment 'Tile brat Li uicoeut,lu the world, for manor btiselt. • Another remarkable cure performed by kfuLeau's yol tank 011 Liniment. Read for yoursed.ve.: , 7homael , ,,rd, a blickentith, lirlpillimai Can avenue, on Tenth kreet. had,a horrible rural ng sore en hie foot. IV , ' tried retinue Liniment., 'Salve., e.. but could, do it •\, 4 O good. Ile despaired of erer beinable to work at his thin again , Wean , * he could not any'welght on big bot ; and by oat 'mill bottle of eLean's Volcanic • Oil Liniment, be le nor perfectly rue .• • .• I Ittienulatlam, Paralysie, Neuralg Brult4., Sprains, &Proem lio he Joh:Allot Muscles. Sw lings, Song I bloat, to.u. l rararhe orltoothartie,Wounde, Vrostr l enter. totes, Burns, os tral.da; Paine. &c., )104 to the u ntagl l " Influence of this Mb .. ful Liniment. . • - : . .•,r rime r s and ~ cAttieot lean I l 5 0,,.., ," rat elm.; Crarked lio I - in, ilwerny,*. lut, Virtult, Kmiec"; tat 11 , -riuske bites. and varioue other I dal .i /reliable to from i oi int r . or ' Every country merchant should . ..McLean's Voleanic Oil Li 0 illlttl t. it it always curse, • A liberal. discount will bo mad* to tg g.II attain.. . • fik•For'sa le kt McLEAN. 'third and Pius streets. St. Louis. 11 gear Vor 'gale in •potts vi lin. Ey J. G. 1 itii-For 'sale in Philadelphia, by EGN, ` .in:t. - • , 4 , 4outh Rah +! t en t- . PERSONS .WAN'I'l elinutr'for See advert Larvir', %Whet colamn. • - vol.. •xxXv. • . • •- _ . . . , - ftirmiing of tfielafa kfiteadingt• .Pier No.- L. • PAN DIISEN . NORTON & CO., Ta.tunti If stir QUALITIES . 1k • RED AND WHITE ASH COAL.,• .1233 'Walnut skeet, Phtliulelphls ?SIZES: 53 Liberty evreet. New Turk., s.lsiiiite street ! Boston. . ' CUIRDERLANDents'f CAL. • Also, solo Agor th O e ichies:Coal arid Naviqatign Compriny. ['sB-42 .; Flier No. 21. . ' ' . ' BLAKISTON & COX, . . SIIIPPtItS OP rpc tow pomr.. nu OP i AVIIITE ASH. RED ASTI ling TREMONT ECIIIIYLKILL COAL; FRANKLIN COMPANY'S CUMBER, • .. LAND con- alsto, HAZLETON I.E. IIIGH COAL. 217 Whlt i :Aat street, Philadelphia. OFFICES : 4 New street, New York, . • . 17 Doane street, Boston. rs 42 , liter N 0.3- CO . . , BAUM, OGLE & CO., i , :. mama AND imerras or . wa.A.sivisztsvcr COAL. Meat Quality Red. Ash Coal. { No. 113 Matont shier. Phlladelplda. ' OFFICES: No. 70 State street, Boston. No. No. Broadway, New York. .. L'51.14 Pier No. 13. &. .HAYES.BI, -GOOSHALI • • lIHIPPERS OP RED AND W HITE ASH SCNITYLICELL COAL. RIIAReNO. 13i PORT RICHITOND. Lehigh and Sottnylklll Coal at Retail. YARD—Corner '23d and Arch streets. OFFICE-103 Walnut street, Philadelphia. C5B-12 Shipping WHARVES for ANTHRACITE COAL, AT GIIKKYWICII, Delamisie River,'Philadelphia. - • N • Wharf No. LEWIS AUDENRIED & CO. ~ROMMEE, POTT3 & CO. (20h Walnut Street. Philadelphia. OFFICES:JIIO Broadway, Nor York. State Street and Merchants' flow, Boston . . . Whirr No. N. REPPLIErA & BRO. , , . • N. K. eor. Walnut & Fourth Sts., Philada. , , OFFICES: 35 Pine Street, New York. L ' i Merchants' Bank Building, Providence. ' • DAVIS , REARSON.& CO., MINE AND 0111PPERA OP THE • CELEBRATED LOCUST MOUNTAIN WIIITB ASIi and -, SPOIIN VEIN , 'RED - ASH COAL, . . Co. 138 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. OFFICE:No. 3;4 Willimn Street. New York. 1 No. II Doaue_Street, Boston. WHARF—GEEENWICII, DELAW AltE ATENUE. DAVIS PEARSON, P1111.A.. • GIDEON RANT. ASHLAND. CHAS. MMUS. 1 N. P.OOIIDON. ' .Wharf N 0.3. ' CHAS. MILLER & CO. : XINF.B.S ASH SHIPPCIS 0? COAL WHITE ASH From the I'INE`KNOT nod 'MT. LA FE A COLLIERIES • • 'FRED ASH,,,, From their PIRENIX COLLIEIIIE9 7 4. CANAL LANDINI:S—OttEENWICII ANRSFRIICESTS. OFFICE :—No. 105 Walnut Street Chilidelphl3.- April 9. '5O 141 y CEO. S:,PATTERSON & BROS., DP:ALI:HS AND SIIIPPEDS IN Locust and Br'clad Mountain WhitoAsh , • • COAL.. Alm, RED ASH. fmm the Pearh Mountain and Pal mer reins. Si-Flour and Feed taken in exchaytge for Coal. - EDik. R. PATTERSoN, Wlt. F. PATTERSON, 'ola ithro4puse. Raarmut PU. . ' • t a.'".iitt.). S. PATTERSON, Wridgrport, MoafgomrryCbtotiy, July '59 30.1y • ROSEBERRY; Attorney at ,r • Law. attlo ce . , otner of Market and 2ndaltreetf, Pottsville. • • • 'Aug-ttst 9, '.5t);,,12.• T y ER Sl'ROUSE;Attornefat Law. Office—Centre street, opposite the Town Hall, ',accents. ' [Frbruary 9, '56 , , .1 1 5 ,...DENVEES., Attorney at Law. 1 4 . 'OFFICE—Four doors above 'Mortimer's Hotel, t.entre street, Pottsville Pa. [Dec. f), '57 ' 496 rpHONIAS R. BANNAN, Attorney at Law. Office in Centre Street,cippositethe Episcopal . ohure,lt,Pottsrille,Perina. 1 . N0v.20. '56 4i-ly JOHN - C. CONRAD, Jr., - Justice of it the Pee and Conveyancer—Oleo cignmite•roat 'Office, Broagp., Tamaqua, l'a. [May 2,'57 78. CLEMENT S. FOSTER, Juke of the fitMie,Mineraville-leollection I. and ageucleg so• licited arid attended to carefully,. [Feb. =, 'bit 841 . TORN SEITZINGER, Justice of the Peace. ST. CLAIR, willattend to all buslners en• trinded to him with diligence and CAM [1.658.'8.1y* .'senses by meta. ntluenee is felt y, purifying end . .It neutralizes strengthen* the etTertoally . rure Chronin. nr - Ner en.tall Debilities uich:llearthurn,, lhe titlnmeh. full. lor Swhntninv In Uncl; nr Welrbt intent SUER.C.IIIng IYAlnwneix of the AMU EL 'GARREI"r, Maestra te e - Conveyancer and General Collector. Offlen,Contre S plx3ve Exchange _ Hotel. - Aug. '57 33- rxrers. l'aln In ftudden /qualm. or On'amos, Languor .1 - Sorra ,or Blutehea dills and ferer.)-- tdder and :Womb, Inenee of Urine, :es of the Womb or J — - A J. 'SErBEILT, Attoru'eTy at law, N 1 Law, Pottotarr, Bolluylklll County, Pa. liiirtMleu on Centre street, above the !deers ' Bank. July 30,'59 • • 31- _ . G., 11 A. N C It 0 FT, Attotii ey at T • Law, and Vaelstrate. FlCE—Centre etreet,'pOTTSVILLE. two deans be low the Town hall. [Aprll 9, 'be r It Cor, 'be Above dieraves lin Gerinsiv, fj • A P. SPINNEY, Attorney at Law, Ashland, Schuylkill eounlyr Ps., will c t as agent ill the purchase andsale of Real Eatate.mllection of rentstae.(Ashland. May :B,'sp' .been !gold dniing to Itax It tolled In w . lll - autTer Welk. i ngfitening, Cbintiti/ CIIIRISTOPIIER Err •I'L E, Attor ki coy at Ls*, PotteYftic.srhuylklll county. Pa. orelos—ln !thihantongoAtreet, corner of Second. Worn LI. 's7_ • 15-ly Ito hti healthy and ome of McLean'''. •then and rein. and the clan\ r cheek agaln.- cti.m. • AVID i l3. GREEN; Attorney atLaw, D .11rrutti West ,rorner Centre and . Market Ftmet.. Second story. Igutranee on Market St. N: eonaultrai In German. r May 7, '59 19. ent.t. if your rhll, eomplrlut.4 met 'solidi quantity of them healthy. fnt it and you will JAMSS 1.11.18.1 !Jona T. sons. F s •LLILS BOYLEp . AIIVORNE - Y,S . AT LAW. OFFICE-1n Maltiniangn anent, neat Centre, Potts. vine. Pa. • [Octob.s 80,18 14-1 y I:very country mer i hthee procured a dial. It self* rap rat discount wilt be .1:10. KENDRICK& j ' [CONRAD T. SIIINDLL ITENDRICKS SHlNDEL;NAt tnrners at Law, TAM AQUA , Pa. Having tam+ ilitComither In the practice or the Law, all professional business In Schuylkill and adjoining counties eutsmated to their cam will receive prompt attegt/0111. !Illy ILO, ;US 22. ntn.nr Denton., !rho er or Sarsaparilla saying it IN Just -eLemen STItEiGTII . It IK the only horonghly, and . at InR (fooling) Jo a Is uct :reser, yet- =QM J. 11. meLEAN, i,3lc4ean's Volcanic PW. 811EAFFpit, Pottsville, Pit., *late of the Re n tylvanla State Geological Survey, explores lands, refixes, /te, 'October 41-tf 1111rE.NRY PLEASANTS , Civil l aud En nper, KITTS VILLE. Orrict‘reen tre street, west sit! e. be ticoptt Stiirket and 2•Ennregittn: • [Augulq, 8, '5; 3:2-Gm! FRANK -CARTEA, Min ,tag Engineer. &weeper. &e., will attend to cora l . elands. mines i town &e, Office Silver Terrace, rotes, We, Pa. • • [Starch 10,'.0 12. AGENCY—For - the Purchase and itariof neat testate; baying and selling Coal; is. king charge or Coat Lands. Mines. &e..and collecting rents. °Mee Mabantango Simi, Pottsville. - CHAS. M. !F1LL...," fallible remedy for Lnmeupos, 'welllngs,Woundx, 11...50ws which ant dents., FISLER, Mechanical • Zogineer mod Drat:whir:oath attends to the 'sale an "mirehaao of nischtnery. and to the rebuilding and putting ny of old machinery... ' Port Carbon, "larch 6.'54 . , 4tain a supply . of 14 rapidly, because EORGE K. SMITH, ‘3l" • Nisilng.Eligloper out - •• Colliery Viewer, POTTSVILLE, Detember.ll,4l4l , "!, • " 41. nserel,nt a *be buy roprktor, corner of • RROWN. Celan, 0. R. H. AWXYNE k [3.14y T H. MeElviain, Civil and . Mining OP • lingloaer,Athlatid, Pa.,attendt toSurveying and .lansgting eeeee ring and &Tidbit Lends. mgrs. iatinetran Lots. and all other , business in.theline of his profession. Letter address, &inn gal n Spring P. Schuylkill Etinnix, Pa. • Yet , . 23,1568 B.ls ' (1r •CHANGF:. aunt of IbuitzuOa- PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MOItTING, BY DENJAMIN BANNAN, POTTSVILIAEI SCHUYLKILL COUNTY, 'PEN N SYLVANIA:. SCHUYLKILL NAVIGATION, LEGAL CARDS. BUSINESS CARDS. R., on the Delaware s _at Philadelp► Pier No. 5. TIMM STONE & CO., DiALICRB IIN VARIOUS brzcomnoris OP fled and White Ask BCHUYLKILL ANCLEHICH COAL MID. ' • oloaors CRECIC- 'CUMBERLARD COAL • • 328' Walnut street, Phi's& phis. - 0141CliB: , 9 Waphingtim Building, Proridenee. / .., :169 Broadway, New York. N 0.5, PQIIT lIIRDIOND. . • - Pier No. 6. • • ROTHERMEL, ' lAD WIPP= 01 COAL, Offers for sale by the °ergo. the beat qualities o RED AND - MOTE ASH COALS. Axed, LEHIGH and CUMBERLAND COAL. • :• WHARF NO. 6, ILICUSIOND. (318 Walnut street, Philadelphia. OFFICES: I 10 Exchange itreet, Boston.. [ 5: • Pie" No. 9. . SIN:VICISON ft. T. OW SINNICKSON & GLOVER, =1:1:13 ECEUTLICILL WHITE AND RED ASH , hso, "Lehigh until Bituminous Coals. &Vets: lg fl32:tut Ph ihdel ph ia.iBl.o rT t°R. thfAßV NO.Q t TORT 11011710NITIlsa. Plow Pte. ltl. • LEWIS AUDENRIED & CO:; Pr IioLIPALIt DEALEILp 13 TOE OW VARILTIEP op Anthracite .& • Bituininoxu3 C0i1, , . (205 Walnut atm& l'lsliadilptila. .. OFFICES: 110 Broadway. New York. .... SG State street:lß.:don. • 1 Pioneer Shippers Irma E±isaGelhpori, . •.' 'Or ' s LEIIIGII, SURING MOUNTAIN. lIAZLETOX AND . COUNCIL RIDGE COALS. r 59 3 LEVIS AUDENRIED & GO: OH'FICMS: 2O Walnut street, PIIILADELP In A. / 110 Illoadway.NEW TORE. 86 State street, BOSTON - - Wholesale Dealers in the best varieties of DOMES. ' COALS—Sete f•ropriciarslf creel: Oafifty, ca;, ble of producing nor 10,000 tons a sear of the cele led Dumont+ ' (Red Ash.) and Duca Kuril, ( Intik As ALSO, - Exclusive Agents for the sale of the purrlyitenutne coat. Mountain Coal. troth the Lanus', Dale Collierylo Ono. C. POTTS 3 Co., allot which will be shipped dir to New York: via Canal; or coastwise, via Oreeuw Kern, (below Navy Neill, Philadelphia.) IM;EMNMMI i The eholcist" (mantles of RED and WHITE eii - COALS . from 'Schuylkill County, selected with spec a, e care, and shipped under our personal euperintenden . At Elizatiethport, N.J. LElliall SPRpo AIoUNTAIN and COUNCIL F. /, COALS. Front Baltimore, Md. ' The celebrated HAM t BITUMINOUS COAL At Jersey City, F. J. (via Lehigh anti dlorris nines) The very superior W ILKESBARBE COAL, from t BoUimore I?in, taken from the "And Ruled Impro • Went and Coal Company's Estate," near Wilkesbar also, ale COUNCIL RIDOI: COAL; both of which, stem ptirposes 10(1 for family use, are unstirpassed,.. We hold certificates In our offices. from parties w have used ?Ind fully tested these Coals. and pronoun them the nits? ANTIIIIACITt Coals for steam in use, p (luting uotlinker.leSs ashes and greeter blue, thada Other kinds now before the public. • Mar 15, 'SS ' 20- Franklin B. Gowen,, - Miner and Shipper of . WHITE. ASTI COA.I. from the East and West Mon . Enda Collieries -MAMMOTIIA n L ACK BEAU! VEIN OFFlCE—Centre street. opposite Episcopal Church. Pottsville, April . 15.17 • PATENT COAL TUBS. ISAAC SgI;I'ZER,-Ageet for the cell: prated Ashland wined by Bancroft, Lewis cell prated has removed his office to 77 C,edar Street, between Broadway and Nassau street, New York. Has also lit Agency for the Fulani' Focht's Patent Coal' Tubs an ['locks. All dealers In Coal will find It to their lute • to call and see this new article for s.arlng labor. New York. July C.. '53 ;27.4ints HARDWARE. IMIZE NIPPLES, Nipple Wreneliee, Colt': Improved ? Smith & Wm en, and Warm.), mto! I. - STICHTER & THOMPSON'S. . Corner etlintre and Market Street& APPLES! APPLES!! . ... 1/ PPLES Paked,;, Cored. and Slice 1 at one operation. Machines Fold hi ' STICIITER A THOMPSO,i, .3.4.• . Corner Centre and Market Streets. - R • POWDER FLASKS, SHOT AND . GA.vIE BAGS, Shot an rattler charges, at STICIITER. k TIIO3IPSON'B,, 38- Corner gent re and 'Market Streets. TO SPORTSVIEN POWDER- F , FF, }FFg,..ltifle am sporting. In Is CD. and 1 lb. cane or km,. or Itstard 4aanuliwture, at STICHTER k THOMPSON'S, L."- . • COrner Centre end Markel Streets. SHOT! .SHOT 1 SHO.T!!! JUST receive 4, 2000 pounds Ne .York Shot, best In Market.itt STICUTER k THOMPSON - 8, 3R- Corner Centre and Market Streets. Stichtet & Thompson; DEALERS IN HARDWARE, CUTLERY . .IRON, TOOLS, &O. Corner Centre and Market, "Sign of Saw, POT TSVILLE, . PA. Janum7 29, '59 .' • HARDWARE ANDIRON DEPOT. TIIRSURSCRIBER, having now arrans his giir,ds at bin new place of !moires end with a new determination of furnish . • fug all such goods as the business of tb Coal I ~tot may require, at their lowist market calm sot the the imnretion of the Public. I shall be alwaY on band, and bane on hand a full stock of Ear -Iron. • Chopping Axes, . Flue Iron COSI :hovels, Cant Steel, Trace Chains. Slit Iron,' Nails and Spikes, Roplii • Tackle Blocks. Bellows; Anvils and Wee. *e. Hardware and Iron Depot', Crams Seam. three d above-Market. east side. FRANK WITT. July 16,1E64.. . 28-if SPORTSMEN ! y ._! spoßirsaszs s : . E latest and best invention for catching wild aul -1 H * mats! ELEUTHEM diratent Animal TrapP 9 , . Small enough to be carried In the packet, and as effective as a. rifle. It will kill a beer or a fox ea ewe: ily ea a rat. /Weill and tee the great Invert t kin, at 111111311 T A UMW'S Hardwire cf Iron Flee, Centre skeet, PonsviLLE. April ZS, 'SG ~ 17. • BRIGHT I LERCH'S zitN KW HARDWARE STORK, tiro doors ..' loin ter's I lotel, and nearly opporlte th' • Miners' Banh,.Pottrolle, - Irhere wilt ,: foaud an eicelleot. most went of II WARE: • Coach Trimming, Film... . jl Springs, .- - sine Traya, . Saddlery ' , • Brltania Ware, abnonsitten Tools. ‘• , Amortment or fine Locke, Carpenter's Toole, Table Cutlery. Glom end Paint, • - Pocket Cutlery,' Bar Iron ',rail a:sea, Table Front; . . L 1 41 14 : " - 'Anvils and Tl•ea, " .a..a and `Pill"; Asa„ tment of toe Gong, itallroid Iron and Salle,. Sheet Iron Cruribleo, dmltb Toole; . Wire, Tin Plate. -: • !Wilding Material,, , n:1110 Kittle', ' - Cart Steel, Sad none , , • - . new Steel, . Pins and Dodoes, Arm Meter, . .. ; Chahar .. Id 111 Sawa, . - Sadiron% Triomf , . Crosscut Sara, : ' . , Ponder and bleit, Fine nand Nina, • . a b: return i hist bankr 19 the public rer the pet . age they extepded to blin in bleindirldnateapeeity. an hope Hie near trni. by the finality of their goods. stri attentiOn to boat now, and. eccontotodndittli .Ptionlh It deserve and command their continued oupport. nutartr a I. . Deatifi its Hartitearkux ili on, Mstre Strxte, Putlarilleiianuaryk lb:15. 1:. r , SATURDAY MORN ING , OCTOBER 1, 1859. -Piers forthe Shipment of Anthracite ISHIPPOI or Esomrcrirmaramixa Cfc•sil w • lIARY NO. 7, PORT RICHMOND. No. 3D3 Mattel street, " • N 0.300 Wert Thtrteepth st., New York. October I BANCROFT. LEWIS & CO., irrAiim AND slums! or ?HZ - CELEBRATED ASHLAND COAL, ' OFFICE-111 Walnut ittretit. Commercial Building, Philadelphia. Noir York 0310449 Cedar &Inlet. .Borton Oflice-23 1111 by street • [0E1.23, 'iB 43- • No. 151.. Noah Sturtevant.-r•Jos.Waimea:umber. N. STURTEVAN'T & CO rip DEALERS' IN TEM VARIOSS D ESCRIPTIONS • OF ANTHRACITE COAL. lIICLUDING TEE NEST VARIETIES OE RED & WHITE ABU ECHUYI.II% & LEIIIOII. goAte ; .4LSO. einIttNILLANN,IrOm ILe Yrosiburg Company's Georges . . ' Creek Niue. . • {No.IIO Walnut sweet. Philadelphia. OMCEII: N.. 25 Kilby street, Boston. • . 1 N 0.128 Broadway, cocci' Cedar at., N. York. Sarlhtpmeots rroM wharves Noir. 12 k 18, Part Map. mond, Xlizabelbport, N. J., Baltimore: 31d.. and Alex, Austria, Ira: - [ A prill6, '69 16. • Pier No. 14. CHAS. A. HECKSCHER & CO., • PIIIPPERAI OF BROAD MOUNTAIN. BLACK HEATH AND HPEORIR RED esn COALS. a South atreet,,New York. 132 Walnut atreo'll, Philadelphia. ['68.43 SPRING MOUNTAIN COAL c New Concern. THE undersigned, having leased the Spring Mountain Alines, AT JEANSTILLF., PA.. Hitherto worked by WI!. MILICIO A C0...s re now prepared to supply this Justly celebrated LEHIGH COAL, and respectfully Invite orders. C. F. RANDOLPH, • THEO. P. RANDOLPH . . CHARLES 11A31PSIIIRE. Applications to be addressed to • Randolph & Co., 111 Broadway, New York, Room 23; 205 Walnut street, Philadelphia; • Easton, Penes Tienton. New Jersey. 04 , Axn To . Randolphi. & Hampihirei Jeanavillal; Pa. iJanaary I.'J9 1-I.T 1 CAIN, HACKER & COOK, ~• i XINCILA AND MOWERS OF . 33.14z015. 3:lL'ain,th. Waal. Aist dealers In other first (pastilles of - White and Red Alai Coals. Pl. 136 lraloul Weil, Philadelphia, and Woodland , - IVharres, Schuylkill. _ . TRONA!! CATIr: MORITA LIACLIti. . Juts 3.1.Cci0z.. February 7.'19 . 947 I. r.voionszEs, AND !KIPPER OP TOE CILIZORATED Lewis Vein Hell Ash Coal. pima the "SEW DUNCAN Hel l M. mines no Other Coll—srbb ,, itnssuresllll parity. IreElrigri sales by .. JOUN SIIMI, Awn/ . • - , For I. F. VOORIII ES No. II Floe +ref, , Now. York Poltimllle. 31srrh. ( 1`-', '59 JJ une , s, 'Skilil If 1 11: CONNER 4..rartiasoN, „Alumni Asp suiPkns OF TI!11 . { reELKBRATED Locust Mountain Coal. J. 3. CONN KR. J. S. PATTERSON, • Axhbind,fotttrill.. • ; County, Pa. rto JONES & COLE, TAMAQUA WHITE ASH COAL. From the Reevesdale and Buokville Collieries. OFFICE—Zit). 320 Walnut street, Philadelphia. drip-Coal forwarded from Port Clinton by Reading Railroad, or In Boats by Schuylkill Canal. f'49-Ye POTTSVILLE. HOUSE, ' JOHN P. ESTHER, Proprietor, ~-- 'l., GVntre street, POTTSVILLE, Pa. "-- ~ tita•Good Stabling provided.'! "..— .U 72.. - .. November 20. 'ti 47- . 'WHITE HORSE f HOTEL." Corner 11 attire and , deantange areas. Thatrifle. - • Joseph:M. Peger, Proprietor. Entertainments and aecommadations • - °Ube best kind. and eTery attention i 1„. will be paid by the hen and his at- ‘ ....., tendantp to make guests and travell• ~ e • , ere comfortable . '. 7 --_.. ...,. . . Auiust 1,'58 AMERICAN HOTEL, .. i Chestnut; bet. Fifth 118iith Sta., 9..., .......11, ' PHILAD E LPHIA. I ' ' •-•-• , / T r salt 30 Ar-Day.'ii* ' ''''''''''''' The undersigned -Laving renewed their lease fur a term of years, ham eh t Irely,retitted the house. having ',Anted. carpetenti refurnished throughout. The 10. ration of this Houk, is unsurpassed, being upon the .Widest and most pleasant part of Chestnut street. (di rectly oppcKite the old state Muse.) near the p 1 tees of amusements. the jobbing houses of Market and Third streets, convenient to the City liallmad,-the cars of which run to all parts of the City for Ave cents fare.— The moms are large, well HAW, have superior ventila tion. and have been refurnished with a care for comfort. We are supplied daily with pore' milk, cream, fruit, 'and vegetables from 11 lane belonging to us, and which is managed eiclusively for the Hotel. The proprietors of the American assure their friends and patrons that no pains will he spared lc Make the appointments °Mots Hotel complete and lie Table eomPare favorably with the beet bowies In the, Union. A og. 20, 'LP attkn' . WTATTtk HEHLINGS. HoLuse,,Blen and Fresco Painter. I"ri.A'FOR OF' WOODS AND HARBLEI4. Glazier, Paper Hanger and General Decorator. itorcENneE fiTREET, nearly.pjfaeite the American Muse,await. [April 2,'80 146 m • Window, Shades—GoldLßorderi. . • 6 - . and 7 Feet Long. . SPLENDID ASSORTMENT! NEW PATENT FIXTURES! At -Nearly lid/ City Retctii•Pripet. Ceti be hetet B. BAiSle AN'S roper and Bookstore. Pottsville: /Weal' and see them. 'NEW STYE ---- ' • or ---• • - a t r , Paper Hanguip, z - ..•'- - Dectoiatiilbs, , 011ed•Window des, Pixiiiress 4e. MUDEY 411,BOWEN, • • Painters and Paper Hangers, C4filf.l Strut. rottirifte, 2 doors abore Americus Hew , March 20,'59 . ' 13- RED_VCED PRIM - . 'NXTE4a,s. x- - earseir. sumiessam. r HE . 'Subscriber has a. large . 174 of . , very choke Pattern'' , et '.. a I Paper, suitable- ter Halls, . - - r Parlors, Bluing Roams. Chim• - PAlt - 1 ~.----. bers avid Poblla Buildlngs.whlch :..-•.., • '.:.:':;'..... he will , sell at greatly reduced Vie e • ..... ; . pricea. The Steak sißbtacesthe •• 'a 1 . .e : .. atest and mat esteemed Patterns. t aper *actual as & Fettle a'Plece. . ''-._ , , , Now Is the time thrilataltis,ibr Pipet fltinglegeand Books at , .. . -., .B. BANNAN'S cheap Whoiesaie and Retail Paper and Donk Stun. air,PAVER lIANGERS SUPPLIM YKRY Cll2/I.P Aprill,74l: , r • • • • ": - NEW STORE. subscribers announce 'to theii Mende and the ciliates of P Wadi:le - and rkirilty, Ithey have taken "AIDURIDICAD'S 4:11.0 STAND." Onlarr of Strand and MarkelStmts. wean thraya be bond n good assortment of Drylikioda, Orem/aides, Provisions. and aTaritly of Betides always kept Ifi a Ord elasti - tan ofore. - Undendandlng Hair business; thotnunbly, they invite aenstons-uhleb. by Witt attention to bad ness and hie dealing, they Intend to deserve. Fresh Goods Condi:Ugly Animim.. The hest articles - lanais on hand at the 101104 PRI vas - • .• 1, lli. P11011E01,14 " , . CEO. W. 11XCK. ; CALL AND . E.T.4 NINATLfeIIt mgr. April 16; '.59 . lOU Pier 110.4. JOHN R. WHITE. Pler Ire. 10. MOM MAIIANOY MOUNTAIN HOTELS. PAINTING, &C. JAMES FIELD, TRA.VELING. PHILAD'A £ READING RAILROAD. _Electralow Tickets, h= Prom Eitiladalphla to Potts. Ank up. wry! MM. villa and return. will he sold at Phil phia, oo tour days and Sundays. at $3 33 tarty good for any kaht au there diamond ott the anereeding Monday. . G. A. 310OLLS. Gateral Stspi. Außnat PASSAGES By STEAMERS. rillHE subsertber is authorized i.• . ji. to take Passengers by Stmmees t• and '-' 2 .e 4 a r from Europe to the gist and second e 'ad w • t• • 'steeragoat (be Wiest rates. A eh Salk from New York for Ltrarpoel oh the 28th Inst. nest Clam Pas. 'encore, s74—Yhtnt Clam. $3O, eons la Pwrrhdotts„.— Passengers alim brought out by steamers. CANA'S,. Apply to 11. Who also setts drills on Carol* In faini. Of 21 and upwards. I • )limb 11,1.9 11 ,• • ~ • . , a lit mag PHILADELPHIA- A' READING RAILROAD C0.,0f- IFey= ;Guth YOU/till street. l'amsraLpstia, April 16th, . _ PASSRNO RR TRAINS FOR lIARILISBI3 . ' On and aft'r Monday, 18th Instant. TWO neer Trains srlll hatriin DAILY (Sander; exefept ) to 'Haw tisburit via Readies so ß d inter meLlNE. diate Ws MOUSING Llaves the Depot, at liroad and Tine streets, at 7.34 A*.A. : Arriving tit Ilarrisbarg at 12.30. Ntmn. _. Aff6it24ool , l LINK. . . Leaves the Depot, at Broad and Vine streets, at &IQ Attiring In Ilartirbarg at 8.30 P.M. • late to Hatriabnig, lid tiara, ,„/ ' $3 25 " .• 2d clams, '''- , 2 70 By order of. the hoard. IT.-11. 81!IIIIISNN BY. April 30, '39 ' 111a014.1 , ' •Seeteloty EAST PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. a ct gAgg l ig w • ON ux A Es N DA D y . , r a ;A! I E I t R h Passenger Trains will run on thisroad daily, ennneeting with trains at Allentown for New York, Easton and in termediate places, and at Reading with trains for Bar. rishorg, Philadelphia and Pottsville. Trains going East will leave Reading at 6 A.M. and 12 31., arriving In New York at 12.30 A. 31. and 7. - P. The trains coming West will leave New York at .IIAS A. 111., arriving in Reading at 61'. IL A train will also Inve'Easton at 7 A. Si.. and Allentown at 8.15 A. IL, arriving in Reading at 10 A.11.' • Faros from Itoodlng To Temple, 3016 To Millentown, $0 90 Blandon, • 23 Nmans, 90 . - Yisetwoed, 36 Allentown, 1 90 Lyons, • 43,—. Bethlehem, 1 16 • Topton 55 Easton. • 1 16 85a tp (5 - New York, 330 Trolghl trains will also run daily between Beading and New York, leaving Reading , at 6.01. Ai M. • • JAMES 310011 E, General Supt. Angt•st 13, : Only Direct Line for Ireland! QTEAM•to all PANTS of GREAT ky BRITAIN and III'ELAND, For $3Ol • tagigt 'The powerful Iron Steamships, CITY OF BALTIMORE. %CITY OF . SS ASHINGTON, CITY Of MANCHESTER. KANGAROO, VlOO, Will call from Now York for CORN and thence to LIT - ERPOOL., *a-Erery :Al i krnate • Pa.rage from NO York: • Cabin, . • - • • $75 Third MIMI,. • • - -$ U • Passage from Lirerp*l and Crrk: Cabin, - - • Third - $4O J*Tassengers forwarded to Ilaree. Antwerp, Bremen and ismburg, fur $B5 In Cabin,s3s Third Clio*. To PARIS (in 26 hours from "Liverpool,) Cabin, $3O; Third C 1111.11,838. Thd above Steamshipa are built of Iron, In watertight entailed moot IC carry each an experienced Surgeon, and every requlsioe fur the immediate extinction of Ste. For Passage apply to B. J; Coals A.Co-177 Broadway, N. Y 4 Jobn O. Dale, lb DroadWay. N. Y 4 to It. EDWARDS, Pottsville; Or to '- J.11.111C11 A RDS, Blltierrrille ' N. B. —Passengers by this Line avoid the risk and de lay or paling lialltas and 4... Johns. as the steamers proreed•direet to Cork. [April . 16- LEHIGH VALLEY RAILROAD. BummerArrangement' of asseng nu. (iN and alter MONDAY, MAY 16th, IMO. the Passenger Trains On then Lehigh Palley Railroad Company will run at the following hours: - Down Train's. /rare Mail. Eames. . ' Acmes. Muueh Chunk at 8.00 A.M., 12.30 P. M.. 12.34 P. M. Blntluntun 040 •• 1.08 " , 12.) " Whitehall 7.12 " 1 a` "23 " Catimauqua 7.:.1 " 4 .1.4 .33 5 ' 2.52 " Allentnwn 7.40 ',... 1, 1.46 •", 3.15 " Bethlehem - , 7.58 " 2.11 •• ' 346 " Preemnurburg . 8.07 " 2;20 '", 3.57 " lirrire. at klabton 8.30 . " 2;43 4. 44 " -- ' - Up Trains. , /care Accent. • Man.,_.... repress. ...Easton at 6.00 A. 31,, 11.45 A. Ml' 325 P.M... Freemaneb ' urg 6.40 " 12:09 " 3.57 " Bethlehem 760 "., 12 10 " 4.08 " Allentown 7.40 • " 4-, 12.34 ' ' 4.20 " Catasauqua 8.0.7. " I .46 _". 4.35 " Whitehall 8.26 " • .00 " 4.52 " " Matington 9.04 " JD , " 5.26 " A rr..3laurirChunklo.oo " 051 ", 6.10 " 10 DAWN TRAINS WITH TIT R 311041101318. The. 6.00 A. It. Mail Train will` an n connection with the Catawirea, Williinutport ai:rl train from Elmira, Williamsport, Danville and Rupert, d will connect at , ~, sni Allot town with East Penn . rain for Rending,'llie risbuig and PAT. Ile: et Cflethlehern with the North Penn. train for e lidelphia: at Easton -with tbeCen tral of Newlereey train for New Tort, and at Philips bunrwith the lit .De . train for •Itelvidere.- Th is train will also onabl germ to go to the Water Gap, Scrantirt and Great (tend, either by the .Bel: Del. cl o the Central of New Jersey train. - . The 12 30 P. 31. Mummer train will run in connection • with the Reimer Meadow train from Wilkeebarre, White Haven, Hazleton ar.d Weatherly. and with the East Penn. train from Ilarrisburg,POtsville and Reading, and will connect with the North Penn. trairefor Phila delphia, with the Central of New Jersey train for New York, and with the liel. Del. train for. Lambertville, Trenton and Philadelphia.. r UP TRAINS WITII THEIR CONNECTIONS. . _ The 6.00 A. M. Accommodation train will connect with - the East Penn. train for heading Pottsville and Harris burg. 1Thr11.45 A.M. Mail train will run In connection with Hie 8.1. Del. train drotn Philadelphia, Trenton p od Lam berteille, with the Central of New Jamey train from New York, with . . the North Penn train from Philadelphia, and will connect with the Beaver ,Meadow. train for VP eathe, lv, Hazleton. White Haven and Wilkestrarre. The 3.:i5 P.M. Express train will run 'ln conneetion with the Central of New Jersey train from New York, arid' witleminect with the Raid Penn. train for Reading, Pottsville and liarriehorg, and with the Cetawitea, W. Ind E train for Rupert, Danville, Williamsport and El mira. Bethlehem, May 1eth,1859. 22• PHIL' pELPHIA.ANOREAtiIIitt Summer Arrangement, April 18, 1859. DOWN PASSBNOER TRAINS. Leave Pottvville. daily. (except Sundaya) at 8.30 A. M., and 3.30 P. M.— Paming Read Ing at 10.10 A. M., and 5.06 P. M. Arriving In Philadelphia at 12.5* noon, and at 7.40 P. M. UP PAS:3ENGER TRAIN* _ ',mute Philndetphia,•dally, (rzeept I. 4 ..ulidiya) at 720 A. IL and 3.30 P. M.—Parsing Beading al 10.:53 A.N., and 0.05 N. M. Arriving in Pottsville at 12.05 noon, and at 720 " Both tip and Down Passenger Trains connect at Port Clinton with Trains to and from Tamaqua. Cataiwissa. .Williatnimort and Elmira. Minfiins Passenger Iriana only connect at Port Clinton for Wine/harm Scranton and , Pittston. .-- ' Psomengern leaving Williampport by. the Catawirra Railurid sight Linn at 10.10 P.M., connect with a Pas. ranger Train leaving Port Clinton at 420 A. smite at Reading at 6.30, breakfast, and proreed!riwt. to Phil adelphia by the :0 A. 31. Circling Aceennot atica_Tralo. LEBANON VALLEY BRA c liCki. Pasto,nger Train IrWleS Reading at 10.25 . as—after arrival. of Up and Down Morning Passenger Trains from Philadelphia and Pottsville. Arriving at Harrisburg at l2:10 noon, and connecting with Passenger Trains on the Northern Central, “Pennaylvania" and "Cumberland Valley". Railroads, for Sunbury, 'Pittsburg, Lancaster, italtirdore And Chambinsburg. • helves Harrisburg at 2.45 P. al" alter arri val of Trains from alma. points. Arriving at Reading it 5.00 P. al., and connectin with Up,and Down Trains for Pottsville and Philadelphia the saute evening: No Trains run on Sundays, Farce... Between Pottsville and Philadelphla.s2 75 and $4 25; Reading and Philadelphia, $1 75 and $1 45; Harrisburgend'Philadelphle,E3 itS and 704 Lebanon and Philadelphia, 42 14 and $2 10. Reading and. liar . risburg. $1 60 and sl' 30; Reading and Pottsville, $1 05 .and $0 85; Reading and Lebanon. 85 and 70 cents; Pottsville anellartisbukk. NI 65 and $2 15; PoltsVille • and Lebanou.sl fib'smd $1 AO • 'Through No.l Tickets—Pottsville to Baltimore,ls I Pottsville to Gettysburg. $4 50; Reading to Baltimore, $4; Reading to Lancaster, $2 25. gir- 80 pounds of Baggage allowed each Passenger.' The Second Class Cara run with all the abuse Regular Passenger Trains. fffirNorningTralullto and AfternoonTrphillip,ohly, run op Sundays. . Through Find Class deb. at reduced rates, tnNlag are Falls, Buffalo, betroit.Chicago, and all the principal points In the West, North West, and the Canvdaw: and `Enalcrant Tickets, at lower fares, to all the mhos, places, can be had on appliestion to the Station Agent. WAlt Tickiits will be purchased beim" the Trains start, Higher fares charged if paid in ears. • • • • " G. A. NICOLL/I, Eng. Gen. Supt. 18- _ April 30.'14 PLUMBING. CAB-FITI I hment. PorrsritLE, PA. be undersignedreapectfally ants not citizens of Pour and vicinity, that having :littera the Ph:tibia g tishasentoilleztryDicke ton t and attached it to MS , Fitting Busimis,lr 11l here r '4IM on both branches, :hopes, by strict attention )nstness=keeplogalisays on id a large arid well selected ek,empioying compete n't rkmen, and doing woo k t irestatterehtypriera—to to a portion of the pnbl ravage. ' • s stock will consist of W Chisels. Ito's. Copper an ...end Bath Tubw.Porcelain an Copper Wash Basins.l rod. a n ament Plngs,Brant Cocks f r . it' and Leather Mee for pay mentmllninch Pipes and Couplings foe privemonta..l end Lead Pipe of all alms, Oasliatures of every kin embracing a fnilmtsortment of Chandeliers. Pendant flmickids:ae.,ke.tte.malinfacittred of the bestgdall y of materials, and of 'belated and most approved pa Maras: - '• • IDAIIIIII:D.11011ETON. .74.prif11,49,- : ,j . • - TO ALL' WANTINV FARMS.- &: advigisemeit m rilialliOston ~ia~ag. (arrarelsciPso Vase Mita! &atm /Mil =dead Miiiisto 035E8VA210116 ABOVE AND III:LOWt GIONAD II EUROPE. , . Rhein IMAMS I. She gaiskssalall of the Rh Novel Rachlaery asedt... &atter Dl* 10. - The shaft known as "Rhine Prussian" has been commenced near the village of Ifomberg, on the left bank of the Rhine opposite Rbstrort. I is being driven forward by the heaviest coal miners in Germany, Ilientel ,t, Co.; of.Rhorort,teodpa ny ,wbich has arrived at•its present great wealth. thritegb the recent increase of the coal tradii.iin the Westphalian Gen. -* • * 1 The numerous di6colties' which are uneounier etd, Ind the novel means employed to overedtne them, make this shaft one of the most Interesting nod itaitortant of the trio Which we are et:Mahler log. The:lden_embraces nothing leis thaiithe &vim(/' by mean. Oran enormous sager, dri en, by steam, a perpendleular tkife into the earth a depth of at least 200 feet,. and of • 4_177ml of less than 21 Ice,. . . I have spoken is a previous letter of the treso - of the =ditto be sunk--tbrouglOnd of the River Rhine which dewy but • few hen. dred.pards away, So s porous bed, actlac ay an ineihaustablelfeeder to keep the mat strata It led with water. - • The nature end extent of these 'trate taw be Peen from the following section:. l' +,Valtrial. Thiet:neu. . Forsactials, floe sand and pebbles, 63 fret.. .. .Alluetal and Oft. Marl and sand, - 15 S feet. Chalk. P''' Marl without sand, 21 feet, Chalk. i Clay and satiate, - 146 feet, Chalk. Chalk 'Wats, '4346set, Chalk. ' Slates, • . , • 36:feet. Gnat measurer . .cfvm, .Li,- .. 23 Inches. i ---- i' • Tote! to Coal; Oh feet. , . ,- li . The holing from which this secti on was foOtaed was made during 1852 and 1853, the hale bet,ls Indies diameter, at top and 5 inches at bom, end protected in the soft beds by anima to Ib 1857 the present ihaft• was ,conametterl It a point 800 feet southward from the boring3ind sunk Into the yard and marl' 79 ft. - 9 in. blow . the surface, by a plan which I will Mentid in my next; when. speaying of another abaft. , ~ At this depth it was thought that no difficulty wtiuld be found in keeping the. water down by meta of strong steam pumps, and that digging ceuldl ee greys in the ordinary manner. But the soft l and pressed up into the central opening, as too as the water W 45. dawn out, and- no • progress c ould be made. A kind of cast iron "tubbing" or Illam was then centrived, withl.fis shiirp lower edge adapted for cutting into the sand, and iditireff: of rings 18 inches high and 24 feet In diatneter4rith strengthening flanges on the int/ideal:ranged go' that they could be fastened „with screw bolts to one another. I.lpen the upper edge of thli mating a set of twelve heavy iron screws were.arraked . with suitable purchase above.• , i . The ring was then "screwed down into thtsoft sand, and new rings added, but's° soar as OP wa ter was taken out the semi-fluid MU reillSfi up into the interior, tiliventing the workmen from going deeper, and at length it was found neeirsea ry to abandon the iron tubbing idea. i...• It was new 'that the plan for boring with cieam on the immense scale mentioned ahuve; We'd ma tured, and in April, 1359, the preparetionsiwere complete and the machinery started to work. The success of the present plan - rests upon ap plying a counter pressure 'on the interior ofthe shaft to resist :before° which tends to past} the quicksand into the lower opening. This nppliers. • lion has been made in the coal field-of St. 13tien• ne, in Franco, by forcing air into sheet iroq eyl inders whose lower end was kept on the buitotn. The air thus took the place of the land and Water, and although a pressure of some fifty pounds to thisquare inch was exerted, the workmeniwore enabled to proceed with their task in the con densed air. ~ • l Here, however, a cheerer counterpoise) was found for the exterior strata, in ,the , water which rises naturally into the phial, or is 'pumped into ir-lrom a neighboring well. The.. work must, therefore, be done entirely under water, and it proceeds at present at a depth-of over a built-Iced feet below its surface. . 4 t l i, • To obtain a clear ides of the arrangeme , im aginer' cylinder 24 feet 9 inches inferior dies eter, of firm brick wall'3o inches thick, and boudd to gether with iron. resting 75 feet deep perpewdieu. larly in the quicksand. Inside of this, and tat its lower end, a series of metallic rings 24 feet In di ameter bed 8 feet high, which - remain froth the above Mentioned unsuccessful experiment' 'and then, on thp inside . or Istith, a second brick,ffylin dor 15 feet interior diameter, with await Itincti es ;hick, which extends to the depth of abodt 130 feet. The lower end of this last cylinder WINATII . posed bra wedge formed "shoe"'Of, cast ironjupoif: which the wall is built, so tbal the wholeieffair has the form of a huge punch., ' 1 . - Now, imagine this cylinder filled with ,rater from near its upper end to the trait shoe, which is the foundation of the wall, then 'forming a column RS high as the exterior water and sand. Fit this interior fluid end upon. the bottom moves ;fie greet borer, which, gradually taking the mail out from beneath the wall, allows! the ; whole cylinder to sink slowly into the earth. The aetion - tif this remarkable borer can-best be described by suppo sing it just cleaned end ready to'be sent begot.— The "head" hangs above the aperture of the shaft by a wire rope fif inches thick. It consists of a heavy frame-work of wrought iron 104 feeoigh, 'and 14 feet 4 inches wide, secured firmly with screw bolts to a massive rodoslso wreught..4l t. inches-square, which runiihroogh the'bottbm of the frame and 'comes to a point, which Aeries the middle of the hole when iking. •1 6; About 10 inehersbove this point branitt not, in opposite directions, two enormous easts steel knives, which rising, as they recede from the.cen-e 4 tee, at the distance' of 7 feet, are bent vertically, in which direction they continue upward two feet. These knives are 5 • inches toped and 2 Inches thick, and their cutting edges' are turned toward the right, so that when the instrument is resolved upon the send, a thin slice 7 feet wide aid half the diameter of the hole is continually dirtied_ by each knifefroto the surface. In fact the appal D ins, so far, is verpteuch like a very large auger or reamer. In order. to catch and earroint the •marl or sand co looeened;a bag of leather and canvass is fastened to the hack' of each ktife, so that the material, pairing over the knifit as it moves around, is caught by the open muuth of the bag which drags after. Etch of these sacks holds 80 cubic feet. and when full they weigh to gether about 15,000 pounds. i We will now suppose the operation, of lowering to commence• ' the engine pi 150 .horsb 'bower, which is used for the purpose, gradually utiwitids the wire rope and allows.the borer todeseeed into. I the water. As the upper cad of the 1 central rod climes to the surface, the whole incitement is se curely fastened andthe rope . unhitched slid at tached to s'seced - ivrought iron central •rod'47- feet long and 4 4 inches square, and wdighing 3,800 po nds . This rod, which erditainsi at loser end a square socket 10 inches long, hi :wised above the mitre, rod already enbaosed ,and dropped over the . protruding square end; Oredge 2' inchesligb - is then run through both an keyed fast. The whole is now lowered 47 feet, t en an other rod is in the same way attached. an ,•so on till the borer rests upon the sandy honor's. A large eog.wheel,on a vertical shaft, which is capa ble of a perpendicular movement of 6 feet, its then mide fast by a Joint similar to the one described, to the top of the borer rod, the fluff is. securely closed by trap doors, and the machine iiready to move. A steam engine of 12 horse poise, situated In a ni3ighbortng' bonne, is_ geared- byl means of a 'strap to this turning arrangement, which is situ ated in the top of k wooden frame-work, about 60 -feet above the centre of the shaiftiopening. A speed of aim revolution per minute Is given toll's borer, andlwith• each turn is is allimed to sink 3:lBth.of pn inch. Such I. the ,power applied, that data* the - progreee of the week i the iron rod, 41 inches thick, has been twisted till is, now has' the appearance of I great screw. • •'. ,t • :, After from tool° three hours turning the sacks are found to be full, and then the whole apparatus most be drawn' up again, piece by piece. The sacks'appear at the surface ,Welled 'With their semi-fluid contents. and spilling (Min their mouth masses of ;mad and water.' A ear, 16' felt long and 12 feet broad is then ran under the seeks; • rope which num aver a pulley and is attached to a windlass, Is listened to the lower code( each, and the eormentsere ;lowly poured out by turtling them upsidedown. It is evident , that ,sieee each knife is not longer than half the diameter of the aperture of 'the shaft. that the i portion be marl immediately below the wall ia nut bored shot, that instead of a hole 22 feet 8 inches; which le the di ameter of the exterior of the wall, only allele 14 feet 4 inches is bored. This ring of earth which it is ma is 50 inches - thick, generally , fells into the eentre,'whieb is kept wend Met lower thin the bottom of the walls, by the action of tha lia- ' wend the pre/sumer the imperineumbentitbass of masonry. 'But, should it prove too firm to be acted open in this way, another borer Is providkd; with expansiveleivet, Which spread out *Heel mils- Ing.the Witte, and scrape one the earth firemen , der the circular walls. This has not to he - treed I often; the wall generally sinks with the trovess of . the borer,. requiring be power but :Hs own weight. . 1.. - The progre s s of the borer varies, of coorsootith the varying hardness oldie strata. Thne.prough April, it was lowered from 10 to 18 inebetler day, but in Slay, from 18 to 25, a softer, layer having been penetrated. - The work la kaptermelantly going leeward 24 bears of the day. As toottas the wall bas sank 15 feet, which requires about two, .weekii,,* new, section coast be built and fistinid - on 'the top.-=-, ThM is done with bidets and - .bydrsulltrittorter,l the - whole bound together; aid toile; for ear wall' with Hi vertical rods, If la r ches its Mimeses., with Atiatervale of Is feet, plates alesst irtic4.3 'echos broad slid 1 loch . thick, which Mt horizoittoiti around the wall; ' ' —' -- " - I.`-- The cylinder thus Wrtesd possum - great lilt ices, and to render the friettok of • Its outer ter race leis, a sheeting of plank , is fastened'artiond the'whola, from top to bottom. The bricks beeell• sary for the work'are made on the epos, at a cost at $2 10 per 1.000; the eat, were they purchased would ha $3 50 per 1,000. The engine moving this boror mates 56 strokes per minute. and in order to guard spinet the breakage which would sone were any sudden ob. Onetime to come in the way of the knitresol large friction joint Intervenes between the power and the massage% formed of two disks about 3 feet in diameterorhich are premed , together with a loaded lever. The contrivance for lowering the borer Into'the earth it eroithy of police. 'lt is evident that the weight of the whale apparatus is too great to be allowed to rest entirely upon the bottom while it is revolving, and that each an immense pressuie, *bleb when tbelloring ie at its lowest paint will be equivalent to lOW* 40,000 peundiewould at once sink the instrument into th 6 sand. To pre vent this, the whole arrangement is hung upon • giantiron sod steel swivel, which depends by a wire rope, precisely above tberentre of , the abaft. The rope Is capable of being lowered by means of a windlass, to whieb• are 'attsched multiplying Wheels. Threernea 'stand at the windlase,and it they receive orders from below allow the rope to unwind. ' To rim all this ineebinery, to atfeed the wind-• lass, fire the. boilers and carry away the ararial. raised, but 13 men ate employed. . These receive 'an average of 35 cents fur 12 bootie work, finding theft - 164lit3ee. It is at 'present the hope of the engineers to reach; at the depth of 218 feet, a layer of clay Whieb will be so Ora. that they can pump.thews tOr out, and proceed with wooden walls through the intervening whist' 1781e6t, till the firm rock ls reached.. In ease, however, this clay proves too soft they must proceed with the boring till a solid stratum is obtained, and if the work _pros pers, coal will be struck in 1862. ' K. 11. L. ptferreb patttr. ! ERROR; OF OMILIZATION. A modern writer, whose works during his UM exerted n.wide toluene*, and whose sentiments and principles still are produeing OMR effect, hag in a sentence cone , pressed thrreanum of the difficulty 'Dow acknowledged In ,the adminietration of the laws. 'the deep remorse for I crime Is less in &deemed 'c tell lint Um. There is more of tympathY for suffering of all kinds but leas abhorrence otwbat is admitted to be crime. 1 Dr. Arnold, of Rug by, was a keen obierver, and had :not only the good at. which he aimed heftier, him, but the diffirsiths •whieb must attend all measures or realms, and the drawbacks which must hinder all human progress. These draw. backs are inherent In the mixed character of all things human, and In the inevitable' necessity that In whatev er good we attempt, ttrll and imperfection oust Intrude. We And In the greduatioa or punishment 'that the popular estimation of crfuie takers Its character feign the penalties provided Irer It. When treason was capitally punished, and arbitrary rulers and . courts construed mere disrespect into crime, the people did not submit to what seems to us now barbarous tyranny. merely from the sentiment rif fear. At any time the ruled outworn. her the rulers. dud the preponderancy Of force lawith those who obey. • Year alone could not keep a nation in check, or compel the pigeons in Dr. Paley's' illustretive Dyck to surrender their penionat dolma. and close their bills 'while they protect the favored few—the ugliest, perhaps, of them all- 7 in the pomession,of more than they ran eat, or even ,waste. The suggestions of eon. science and of duty :caused the popular - eubiniseloo, when the pine wretch was hanged, drawn. and quarter. ed fur presumptive treason, for he wureonsidered by the • great multitude of those who witnessed his death a great criminal, bennee he 'was a greet sufferer. Con: tempt was thrown upon !din, proportioned to the limo- Tar with which hie remains wire heated. The act of the rulerslstemped the rebel isthmus.. Here and there 'area. a wan superior to *lmpolitical saperstition cif his throe, and a Tyler and a Cede, denying the eta of treason, • shirend how little mere fear would; operatello deter. re *Waimea. The Chinese of the present day tolerate ix.. (Anions of rebels by hundreds and even by thousands, not from pure fair of the power which Inflicts the bar ba;vity,but tnxn a latent impression that the rebels re-' eel.s. .their due reward. illman eentiment rolls In mighty wares of thought avid conviction. The tide cannot be stayed at the pre sides point of 'propriety. The sweeping aware., abinsee, undermines and even destrnys things good and useful, which ought fo stand, and which we regret, fruit Well, when they are gone. Opposillim to change only stinsu- Wee the onset. The coneerretive, party in a Rafe it gorually found by the historical reviewer who comes fp alter the struggle, io have been as far behind' the age as tee innovators against whom be contended Were In ad ✓ nee of it. There is one mode of annoyance which is al aye powerful atalust the consecrative, and complete ly' useless against the radical. And that Is the employ. Input 'of wit' and gamma. Ity a curious ' fatality, the • representatives of the old regime are continually appeal ' it• to this dangerous weapon, and the recoil is sure to bort themselves more than their opponent,. The shafts , of mitre thrown into a mixed O.owd are quite as likely , c n et wa rike st r i le a r a id a 4 re ns g l e "L nerall ßad y a leg4 hit sa oge re it a ce m n i s zed few e ."R d ad - 1-, . s with eonsereatirre tendeneles ars driven . over to lint every o the popular or progressive party tells with marked 4 d terrible execution. And it . mast be conceded that d ti er.,fradnearatuaraflahrraleaniddeatbaytatheaf things. jo h f nu dbe a "fe ton th.lr opponents A witikism, or a slang cry, thd provers party have originated many truly brilliant ~ . , 1101 'd epigrammatic sayings. What could be more effect .`ire. for instance, than the oathof Paul Louie Courier,: I' who mw, In a vision. a fanatic the Motes que,depre. .t ottlog Ali untrled.changes on it re. 'Domingo( creation, add crying out In indignation and alarm, "Aloe Die. ! onuerrons li chaos r' There Is In this saresera not only le highest point of radical wit,' but the tone and typeof reifies! ailment. '• ' 1.. i • We do not intend, in this connection„to speak of poll • tins, however, or of goveratnente. except In the relation which /egad pains and penalties beer to the soppriesselon ' of vice and' wickedness. The problem. to one country, and In Igngland as . well, is to devisee how the amiable ' " ."Wymmethy for reoffering of all Mode" may be prevented: from lessening thejust s•abborrenee of what is admitted! td be crime." - The sentiment of personal loyalty, sadly! atruhd, was still productive of good, and did much in its! . d'' y to add to the abhorrence with which crime against; t &peace of the king was regarded. All crimes were,- 5 .by tbs -fact, and afterward by the fiction of I •w,I, a I nit the peso' of the king. Rut personal lojalty, n w meld to be extinct, or nearly so in Finrope, can hardy i be considered ever to" have had an existence in this e nntry: Government is an •abetraction, office s gar ent whirls Tom wears to day and Bicknell! put on nil i omen. &twat* fmm his odic*. nobody cares for Tont Dlek in Power; we mean for the Indlvlduar'person, I g ,y• more than for any other Tom or Dick among the / altitude. Indeed, the unfortunate official maydinve rI a personal respect paid hint than be would receive In veto Rte.- For we have a fashMn of depreciating can- Idates fur Mike, and Incumbentrilhlch team em but a small chance for anyth ut odium cam ionitafe, the furthest thing friar , which can.be ins gined. In the mother country the se is no better.-- 'he ministry , who are the governispent,ere even moils 1 Deily lampooned than nisi' rulers Ire. , Regard for law should bike the fleet of the loot affee on for the sovereign. And open the fidelity with }}bleb lair is enforced depends the wholesome -abhor nee of erime.'" Lemma thepenally, and you inevitably diminish the gravity of the offence. We Sr. well rid of lee'bat may be termed conventional** tronstruelive ellen cs:-,butthe tendency is to' lop away too much, and to milt sympeethy,with sufferers by their own faulti to diminish the detestation with which crime should be nal gardsd. Ther,rrimile unfortunsfe,jeertainly. but ity for his distress should not' he allowed to procure liaffutpunity. Reformation of the offender -Is one•oh u he rescind bye due grednation of the penalty to the. ' ties of the nubile safety. ' In treating criminals t of punishment ; tint protection of the public against ffenees is a much more nretticall purpose: The bitter rime. The farmer isiediffirgat of attainment Hutt Its legibility even has been doubted. - .' e- ' If we have more than wood refirrid to this subject:lt s because every day's observation 'Chows its groat Impor nem.' With the relaxation of p n rib buten t. tbe d lege see hick attends offenees , grows continually less— In the. ors to encourage merry, we are losing eight elite nee - Ith too much lenience we may Impair that dread at [ imn, which, acting as a preventive, is a thousand Sold .better than any punishment after, the haety—Philadet iPhig Nod's /interior*. • . . BALTIMORE. " - • ; Lor' Por yea rs that City was . governed by the Dem. Antic 'fil l Zl,..iitese rowdy element hesitated not o ol s ; hi s :ot .A d c ow lo n ng nie a n s I t n ha p t ol e i l t e ic al s e i n p t ro: s ea s s i l d o e n, ti a cep control by ant! of violence, of the e le c tion ith - the rjeminfaCy, we hear”o "independent orement"fili put, do an the,outrages perpetretn&l' ~- 1 t o attempt was made' to brink the wrong- d oers. loathe. As long as they acted with and aided - - ho Dfmocraey In their strife for 'office, they were u4alried. Now howeber, that a portion . of This ad material has in, that City, bee* transferred- to he American pally, and we' presime, is net a hit Worse thaylien the . Democracy possessed it, the latterihave langur-ai-8'l! new movement' in stress of eirisioni i ndig nation, to put it down. It Is Solely, p Demi:wrath: movements for piirty • nds, and lust w e ek bisiGr Bwenn in an address i te i lthe people . of 13 iltininlet, exposes very - f t u'lly ith motive; shows ( very' clearly. where the •eiil 'lilfzie lies, namely, With the quail neutral press of that city, which keeps Baltimoreiln a state of lrr teflon by Systematic. misrepreseotatlon and abuse; and that no greater nor more dagrant nets 1 • - i ofiriolenee are committed there 'then in , other , leoMmunities. Indeed we believe that any period Ofi the history of Baltiniore under the American patty, will compare favorably with the Peitz ad. ministration .in Philadelphia. 3layor Swann [thinksh that the 'rause of ibis evils-In Baltimore, lain the present diifective ConstitutiOn end crlnsi- Inal system, and reetitometitts - aMeyor's Court, 1 kid other reforms in eilminat .adminlitrutien.— fEitablish these he nye, andr owdyism will loon the extinguished. and the eft Wet Court be ens:. bled to trenseet any ammo{ of buboes pissed upon it. The Mayor intimates strongly.ttmt the Batt and Piney; at kindred t ans, In th at city. have diise more Injury than. ell: i tate city'. . rowdyism. 1 The whole matter may.beeemateill op, is - tbese fee Mards--tbe people. at Bettimottaitirsbeen - misled • and teaseled *gannet the present city government tIY designing "opticians.' TIM Meyer slates dir t thmtly; that haltillitot opholdnieetleue achieved by tread; ittit,be lenowlie always.' ;Intoned to i Mote with etniseiettlie,Mai to pit down violence, i 'tate:pram anilety' to . liriajg about harmony I 1 9 4 4 3 9 4 f, till!, t. - ' • 1 iir e are ossitoia Memos the tone of the Meyers :' eddess;ilMCtlM jitiment movement In Baltimore, 1 i- a selfish' beatociatleperty *GIG sprunkt4 AC- _,H:.. - .:AANNAIVB - -i 41141':-PiliffriNCIF-FICE\:-.-:( . NeithSintspeured Ukase dsitiO , prepare d to egasao JOS add BOOK muirnitiriiihri . &seri Ow at the Odioest tie Muss' Josrass‘obeepits tie lk • esai bed isid etkitSetabitabatutittbe Utast y . t sueb as . Atiaittalsopfelste.'• .111 . 117:Of Zettifteo Urge Asters. asilree paper dt hiedo ls Is . 8 , . AtendEiite Artielese /great/tit. Time &mg, Ent Thads, - • ,07der . ilseksode.. , At the very shortest *Mks. • °Siesta& of JOS TYPE I Ml* totheatve tbus t bat *flay *this seat Is lids see., Uou ot. Use Stale,aud se beep hasstsestployedespeisly ; !be/ebbing. Beteg a practical ?slots *anal,. ars et 111; guarantee our week, to be as seat as as, tbit ems' be hula putts thoeltlOd . PBIBfIBO Is coma too. • at the aborted loathe. . 110callsons4 It oven nrieiy staple. Dint looks of every description inexisfaatorod,bound nonrated to order at shortest aotket. NO., 40. • ewe if possible, the control of tbhativerseent of n , that oity. The past history of the party then la no patentee that Baltimore ander its Selo would be even i,ta paseefal neat present, and tiareithens should *lts with the present anthori t tlee _ can then reforms is criminal stdminktratios which are needed, and "bleb would stratithea the hands of the city adtnintstratiOn. 3hb "mild be lb eOtTect movement, and the Chitlins of Bahl morsStonld adopt it, instead of boles Ingesseed , by c orrupt 'politicians; and an. equally - earittpt • Ona of the steeza plows whichenteeed lineman- petition at the Ault national egrieulniral show at ,Chicago, was !ousted by. James Water% a Pottsville boy. He is'st preseet, foreman la a machine shop ho Detroit., ~ Be Bernd bft time Ur" ' Warty as a sethante with Haywood I Snyder of Pottsville, and bu Rustled the trade ever eftee. A Chicago correspondent of the Nei' York Fri-' • hue thus alludes to Mr.-Waters's plow: . ' - . 4 1a • June of the present year he eonuneseed building the machine in the hoptrof getting; It ready for,the Freeport trials' but failing in that be has come hereto try its strength with Fawkes. And his strength it not to be laughed at, I can imam yon, jor the whole is of wrought iron, sad_ as ponderous in else ,as the ear of Juggernaut. or _ I the more modern vehicles of Van Ambush &Co. , Not contest with a modest bits of ten feet, stab ' ai Reines .takes out of a green award. Waters swallows eighteen at a mouthful, and keeps at it all day if rumor may be credited. "The engine has four 5/ inch cylinders', with a 12 inch struke,onaking 24- revolatiout to-oust of the driving-wheels. The drivers are ' rest fed in' diameter, made of } inch o iler Iron, std with a face of 26 inches. They :See each two sits of ' bar-iron spokes, crossing seek other ioisito brace both ways like a trotiftg wagon. There! ane two steering wheels In front, Iva feet in diameter. 13 '. inches facet, and ire turned by a worm and obeli by a crank by the engineer, who studs in front., 1, at the right hand of the boiler: The main axle , is of 4 Inch. round iron, and fitted with oil-tight boxes. The boiler is the horisontal tabular one ' used on locomotives, bas- 46 2 inch . tubes, suds ' 2:3 ; feet fire. box that ma y be used ttr either wood ' or coal. The boiler is bolted !tithe axle by chimps. and in frost by a lighifratneithick rests upon the .. axle of the steering" wheels. Motion is given to '. the, driver's by a pinion working Imp internal • gearing which extends all around the inner face of the drivers ;. the pinion is turned by its wheel gearing into the engine shaft direct. To pr • , slipping of the wheels, pyramidal-shaped ribs of - i - iron are bolted diagonally across the fate of the drivers. Tbe inventor claims that the weight of , • the engine, is so placed that from the enormous ~ diameter of the s irivers it is thrown upoh their forward facet and quite removed from the steering wheels. It does not look to me to be fiCti but we shill know all about it when the trial I comes off. The great'aise is given to the main. eiheels to pre vent miring in soft, ~groind, they being large enough to cross an, ordinary slough before they would have thaw ta.aink. But' bow is it with re .t, gull to,narrow gullies just about ten feet wide?- ' L think the plow would be in trouble. A tank be neath the boiler Voids five barreli Ut water l . which'. may le pumped into the boiler at Will. A tender or two-wheeled cart carries fifteen' rule mere, and on its deck . ..coal sod 'wood anon h for • day's work. This tinder may be detach . end le ft at 1 ,.., 'one side of, the field; or dragged behlia the in-• gine, and in front of the pions as desired. The ' plows are fifteen in number, ; attached firmly to a triangular hems, which runs on castUrorbeels at •.. the corners. They s ure net separated and lode ., pendent in attachment like, Fawkee.so thalsomi of them would miss in passing over baslnsonnl , 'dig deep in.going through hillock., without nom. promise or evasion of obstacles. There- arts L t gangs, one having eight, the otber seven, ph, . With (rating, wheels, end all, they weigh' easily 6,400 pounds, while the engine Itself is chimed to ' ,weigh only seven tons." • ,i 4.0 • fl• •-•-•-•-•-•--,-........--- . CHEAP POBTAGR AND PROTECTION TO "lON IRON INTERESTEL—Ifie'II4III. Jai. Cooper rt Iflithlil a letter to some putt:min of Pkild 6101k:epos the sulieet of cheap postage. Iliiot onifesti ly ,opposes the, suggestion that the' rates of paet age should be icereased,rm was proposed* the bill of last session, but advocates its still iFitther redaction, either by a direct 'tax, or by the' Doe ernmentseiling stamped envelopes for the primp of stamp. He denies - that the Post Ocoee Depart ment has a right to be Made a self-sustaining In stitution, any more th in the. Judiciary Depart !bent, for ho says the duty of a Doesn't:time to afford a remedy for the deprivation of rights ind the - redress of wrongs, is no more . necesraq to the " Welfare sr.& happiness of the people than the duty of proriabg thens 2• with Sufficient mail facilities and cheap postage..' The loss that would 'accrue, ta, the revenue froths further redoetiois of , the postage rates, he says, should be made op by In d duties upiiit foreign , import., so.leiled al to prinCtit oar do *Ole manufactures, and especi ally the iron in stand in case Governmentre iuserthis duty " protection longer, be argesAhe formation of irleagete of all the suffering lamellate Jo question. The 'iron interest alompebe sap, holdi the balance of power between the'paliticsi parties, both in Piroosylvaniaiand New Jersey, and in certain contingeonice in several . other latates;as.well is in - . iNtotedier of Congressional. Dietricts in varians,parts of the Union—and there cairbe no doubt, thidefore, of its power to enforce, its demands. . BOOK. BINDERY. RE-oristsaor VIP APIZIC4III SLAYS TALDII.-• la'Hawing L.:inset, from a late nomher of Savannah (Georgia) Daily-14'ms, in 'reply to lb* ProvidVnee Poet, will {bow tbak•it la the deter.. Mitialita! of *large • body of thcpoutheria .. ooople to tails , upon the itipebilta of thla latletattFilis at all haaarde:' ' • questiott'of domentle'poliey buster, taltii lc our oreollectiou,,grown so rapidly in &Voir as has the propitsithdi to repeal the laws by', which the African slant trade, and consequentlyl thole her system of the Sootb r ie restricted, sad the vi tality and perpetuity of her iostittetirus endanger ed. We assure-our Providence cotiunporasy titers is'a etell•feauded, desprouted, and wide.spread tog coorletian lb the mindtiof our Sciuthern per- • ply that a domestic institolia so indispensible to their prosperity, so 'usenet to their social, politi cal, and maternal equality in the Union, muss be *freed to their own cOntrol and regulation. The recent 'Oolong and defiant attempts of the North to eirculMserilte end proscribe the Sunlit, Needed. her byli.trce from the publig.dontaio; and by OM gratioi aid societies to invade and colonize her border States, has opene‘the eyes of the , , eta people to the fact that if they would pritserve) nut obly 406 equality, bat their very existetnee in or out of the Union. they must bare "tnorer-Afri can stuck; as the North has Its yearly )olleit of European stook, and , that, in accordance with the t universal rule of political economy, the relitions ; of. supply and demand mast regulate bat labor s3steut, as it - does the labor of the North.' Tel New Yak Courier nag Enquirer deepe's see the New York Herald is a reckless anti a bell Press, assaulting as it does the properibser. 'vanes of "The - Lord's Day," and all those initita. Soils of Society which constitute eivilisatlow and Voider us a u.oral• and a chriitian people. This strictures grow oat of the editorial endorsement ol the Herald, ot the repudiation of Sunday by the, infidels of New. YOrk.. The Charier :thinks that as the support crib. Herald 'tnes, mainly. from "the country, that the clergy and presishould manfully array themselves against this 'eighty 'u gh)* of lioentioosneu, and demand of their hearers age readers not to sustain the monstrous iniquity. The Owsristr's views are correct; .Saeh Journals' as the New York Herald and Philadelphia Led ger are dangerous, to the morals of 'the rising gen eration, and parents and guardians should not permit them to be 're a d en their families: !If oar youth are.ip be fiinillariiedirlih a light, and Lod dal treatment of the sacred usociations blended with a thistles obsorvono• of the Sabbath, what kinitof men Sr, tbsi likelY,to We join hear tily, with the: Ocurfor is its denunciation of Ind ' delity and lieentionsnue, and of the pre,* which wcold bring the Bible and Religion into digs-, I`pujert ;Touts Ilium. & Coiraar.--Thii Philadelphia kin of which Allis 0./krone, !brandy of ibis , Borough, Is a member, has built' its' b,litesi of smantifactaring pertrileryoA, ote.,aiWnsport log fancy rrticeo, to nab a height, ibat then era probably, few competiiors of equslaagnitudo ' in the ENDS bliallelf,' to the country. The ern occupies not only the whole of a large building on Chestnut street4t.bas a bonding In anothe r . part of the City,: for manafasturiog parpo4 me. its seepi,die.,iiie manofaetared by steam, s y which espediuti, d'eboaperis the *parades.— The knt altitailli t -that it" sates this, year will exceed 1400,0611.', - ; # have sot the date for tie. log Partlealers,' bet .ire; pietas those ibis go through the estaltlishiiint Of the Arm, an ; latnes. tins hour. 1 , .