oor lent nlNEtti.tv te StriAl. */ yer mium, payable. In adviincq— lot paid in -adcatice. . • _ . • --111. he Atrial v-li.licred Gib .miut— , . • cLIIW: • . : • pier to. one addre . 2s (In aslinuamj. . teen" " • "". -• )ivalorriptions omit invariably he paid i advance. Ji)P6N.I.I, will be tarnic.bed to Carriers and others 4) per 100 copies. rag) on delivery.; • .• lergytneu and SCIIOOII TeßChelti will be runalrbcd e Tor-nrut. st Si 50 in advuuce. - or *l.-15 if raid the year—ever one year, fall rate". A - . Bates of di•ertiiiinx t • Itlinc,s, including date,'olte insertion' 75 de.; a id ; incur insertions "IS di, One vinare of 7 lines.: and for lor 2 inrTrtion2 ; 315r-6r/ions 25i quent irwertione„, 25 Milk) per 29aare. Lager ur proportion.. ' : • urverns.) • lucre. ; .2 00 .$3 ~50 • • .• $5 00 lines .. ... . $ Na .4 00 7 -00 -• 12 00. D 00. ares, - or 14 linea, .• 600 1000, 1.9.• ))21 600 :. 14 Ii) - 20 00 24 ce • 22 - e; ` 2s " 1004) .15.00 • '26 VI Column IS 30 00 . 95 00 -ter irger simee as per atTreernen!, • • , Nine . ‘i'ngle nee cour.ted 6a. a - .iine ill ii,dvertising: etces and D 15 4 ,01117 frets. rat. 3 I unes. 1.2 .50 ,11;rti,sti •itLoiLNoties and Iliswilatit,nr• 0 • E_TRA.DE ADATERTISEMEN'TS. -..__ -_.------ - - --_=~F_~__~___ MEE -_- - ''. - 4' ...-..74 . i. LI 1. ' - it -' 1 1; 4 ,7 , .7 -- f., - IZ - .', . -- 4 47.-- ';' ) '!e •-• ' , T - Z - - - .7-.7.,:1..- -- -.--,-= ,_,,, '7 ' -- -;", -- .F.. - ----- --: -';L"',' a•-.4i . - -- q,;',.._._i tt ~,,, ! ....,,,_,, r ; r.1:„7 `_dam. - 5,...f .... „... - .....ti..e.;.1* -- 14.1 - .0 z 1;-,--t, . . --,....--,_. -'-..'"-.."--' --'---,:,..--7..,.,-'.- :',.. 5 . - .. - • - -- '-''''' ..":-.-- Tenadauh . of dm Philadelphia Reading R. R., on the Delaware,' at Philadelphia..--Piers•for.the Shipeictlt of Xtilbracites. NTARD; 'SANYER. &WARD, 9 pine 4treo, Walnut " Philadel;jllia. Zii#bg' cc cstaxi,, OF .ALL - KINDS BY THE CARGO. Phi \0:.7. 011 ~11 11 • • Al' II I.T 1E 1MM1231i2 SCHI'Y L1iII~I:.' ('OAL Wharf o. 7. Port Itichmoittl. • • :116 Walnut Stroct,'Philtuirtphia •- . IFFICES: 301 - West -Thlrteath St., N.. York • • • 4" • s•«e;• No. 14. YORE .& SOHU .I.:IrTT.L COAL 00., . • - -- . . sarerau or . - , • . . . AD MOUNTAIN.. 'PLACE. REATH, A...NV • SCPEEIOR RED ASI.I. COALS.-.. - . 26 ExTilhlip•, Pjace..New York. . ICES , 22T•Walniv erect. Philadelphia. • . j S. C. ThO i:•g ...t. Co.; Aare.. .7T State - . • St., Ike.t.on.,' CAIN, HACKER & PDX, .6uirrrug or :ST 'GAP. _ • • LOCUST MOUNTAIN, • .IO'LACK.- HEATH: eali , rfi in other first gnalities WHITE AND.RED 'ASH COALS. 214 Walnut 6trert, Philadelphia, and Woodland . Wittu-vei+,'Sk - huyikill River. . . h uylk s Cets. -. llinums llAvur.n. .Jussr. :11 . .- Cdow. W3l. F. MClODY.:Shipper anilAedit. Scill Ilavoi, Pa. 0 ciy . ruan: 15, ,62 -MLA:DELP HIA; - . 1 k, : lUYLKiLL.NAVIGATI. OII7 7 ,onp; Whirscs for . ANTHRACITE COAL at trcvnit Ith. Del;:wape,lU cr,Thpuda. W 35 AUDENICIED t& Co., AGENTS FOR THE SALE OF: THE Creek Diamond- Coal, Co.'s Dia nand Red Ada, and Black Beath White Ali Coals. (2K. \tinlnni Street, rhilattelphin ICF:StIIV. :S.:l W Turk:. . .trt...et,l3ustuu.' Wharf ICEPT".ILIER A• BRO.. " IN. F. cor:Welnut iFFICES : Pine Str4.L t; Olerchents` Bank Building, Providence . . . . . DAVIS • PEAItSON h. : C0.,. - ; . . 'MINERS .0 . 41 ,- ,1.0P1 . F115 OF 111... IE.A.TED,LOCI"S-T-MOCNTAIN WHITE ASEI itrid SPOIIN VEIN • '. • : 11, E 1) - • ti.II C 0 AJ.i 135 Walnut Street; Philadelphia. . 111T:rotultt•av Room -.N0."9 Trinity OFFICES: • randw .• - ar.-..tar , . • • •• - • . Doane Street: liiiyton._ " • DELAW.ARE -AVENLTE. Is PEARSON, • VAAN6:I:, NAST. ASULAND. , R, ..E. -w,-.Tomcd.ti.soN, . SHIPPERS RED AND COIL. (By C .11:ti.} • • • 0. 71:), NVAIZS:I_: I T T. ST. • . • WlenttveA: Tc , t ri.,III:NY AVENUE, Tort . Itichniond i., 1 .I.I..AnCE4STIIEET,' PAUL ..JA I, T LNG KELLIIR: di 'NUT - TING, .ppet'it of Con' ia of tlie 'tent: Quitlities •frollfl'ort Mattoon(' it 1,101:0A. h FILLER. (317 •011LIdelphia. L • NUTTI.N . G, 30 Kill)). '1314.) , 1i • Agtif Uoinu• Y C,C, . , 9-.lt ACHE:tiCIi for• the • Male: of - • incSll2,l',lon.iN-COAL; I,retn the Ltinc . zt:iter o rry, has thi. itay betm tran,lo red fr.ttrt. Nt3t'At'll to 1)AVI, PEAI:SON - l'hiladolithin: io the. tittly authorized • L l ent .to of telel9,...tvd Coal. -.oroi•rt• and •cortienimicittiou.s to ..tha,s,‘..l to tbetitttt I'littatiell.hift or Nt.w LI Nns.vi, Secretary tiod Tte.ii•urer. 3nly _O-.P 11T 71i IV" IA P -NOTICE: tune this day entered into. ,anerhipfor • the purvoe.,l" 1.11% ing and selling (4liefis at. till Walnut ft twet, lies itoigon: Thebt)l6 cif the.tirin NOII be Roth :l,bitner. •• • FILF..:K. . 1): 3. 'j6' • AL, • . • PHI 1.A1.11.Til lA. PRESTON COAL AND INI P V I.:ME:NT CO. ini.f. - tz.krn into their Owtrii:Ott!..s the. gale of I heir tied the.pleseia'.‘ ear, are .110 W eicitC or r.,r.ral the varioa, , FirlIk...1111:1 : WI 11 . furnish 6na ery - quality and IVeirarat hal. The. eettiplity .. eeeurtyl Ith , t=en ice," -of SI. h LK LEY, Esq., • • the la:a tweaty:) . :eiiishaa en; ire ehare: o - ,, f immense I,le=ines, , of. theitiaidim!iti R. L'4 . t.. LA: atni - fvel that uuder ti:e -Ftitervisieu ;ina 1.6.1 nil a olers matlhi i iter..s. et the Con:ploy . tautly - la it at teeded• .The Cora pany e Piro . ;W.VA.& one of the new wharves at, " 1 (NO. I-15i . 11 . 1j111. 4. , a depth of water of :!..2 lee% atid -he lit.te he 141 At 4:11 moos vessels of • the hugest On he 'l,refw,tit eat% tut sent :to the elbte of the eonipany, ttu.s!4 Walnut tt r r€ , et• aoel,hia., .-tent fold • New Y•_ o ` l, : Cruces 1"11.be ti ettiereatier. , DENR I. D. MOOI2E. 9-24 n : • :..President. BROAD TOP. GENERAL OFFICE Al) TOP VY.ETE ASH Semi-Itititininaus COALS, No. 104 'WALNUT STREET, ePHILADELPEJA. • ROUE= MIRE POIVEL; Manager. ' ... CONNECTIZTG OFFICES :• , -.- 16 Tins - Oir puifdiuirs,..Amitirii. l'lLasis. 3S T.riaiity Ilicw :17ei1L . .. . ... ... . . ' ..':..tr .. BROATI' TOP WIIITE. ASYI „ CALDWELL . .. QOEDGN C 0.,... 112 Wtslmat Slreet, Philndelphiirs, .• • . No; 11l Broadway.. New V0r14, - Pro- 144 Stale Street, Boatels, supei!or quality or. this celebrated coal fionX their EDGE HILL '1 coimvscr,: • shi Hied exclusively by them. . • rill 1G _ • ' „ , • 14-Iy. . • • nit the Largest ".Avittfacturipg'ehemiti i. the, im ne , vl9 . iete(i, With Mr H. T. Orr...warm. Mann- . ter - of Heim hal'i Gebnint Prerml(ionF.:: he oecti the 'clriv . -Flore oppoFite , m' rt'idener , 1,1141 W " ~ .t•- • R iitl in-ouithictinm the brwirv , Ps where 'otherA had be , ..n eltiltlly go bets,llls. 1 have been IVorably ':g,:sed with hi , eirriacter.atill entervrise....... . • WILLIAM WRIGIITMAN; P(rmt'Atrowrns - WEIGHTY: Manufacturing Chcinistit. 9th and Browti litrecta,.Philadelphia, 4.1-4111. • :CTACLES AND. , EYE eI.ANMEM.—A laigetisscrt- - .n.ll hand. ati4.fiir sale bf. , JOSEPH : hmaker t Jeweler. Centre, St:: Vot!syille, three ahnve tsar Mortimer tiun Match ttrinte article . 'of Country Lard, : fresh and ausululteratmUlt . • • . • . • IiOIIANNA.N - &,SCITNERTS.. Market atreta, above Thiel, Poitevilllti. EM=l ..S7 00 13.00 VOL. XLII. . . . _ _.. ...... . .. ... : . . ... . - - ----= ' =-= . 7-- - -------- =' = " 4- Eriz..W- 1-- ..-• ,, .. - 7-_--,,•,..2.-- -7.-- 1 - ,::- - --- , ---- -- '7 ,- - , --: - =_ -- - - --- - - ,- - -4--, = ,, , , -- -- " .., -,, . - q.',..i.._ .1---''- - - - --k,•=a 7 - 7,.- ..,::,---;:: : . - .7. - ---_-_,--- ---- •,-.._.--, . --- _.:.i.1, , - -, _ -I Z_ - _ . -- - - --- -- --- -,- fr-- - - , • ,----,, -_,_ :---- - -- -,-- - , • , --.7.--1- , -- , --,:' , -- o ie*Z - .•- ,, ,..-_ , , - , - 7, - ,....-• -- - _ . ._,:,...,- _- - .. 15 : •-::"7: - - - - - .;----- --- _ ,- -- 7 , =-_-- -- - - - - ---• - _-:--::. -;:,,_':,:::::-.--,----,--,--: ..- -- E --- - -,,--, • •, ,7_ ,- . -- .. _.,:-_, _^..:, - 7, - ; ,;., , ,,Z.: - ;.- _._ ...„ 4.,-,, , ,.. - - , •,, , r - ` - '. ,- -.r2:2 1: .` , `, -- .*: : 1, ; - . -- , F .r. 1.t: , , , • •= 4.7, • ~,-.., ‘ , - - : - .' . = - W -., = - : .Vief,i ft7: - 7 ,- : - ';'. -- ---- - - 7."- - --- .1- -=--- =-= - - -- --,-- -_ - - , ---- , -.7 ,--- 1 , .-',.-:, • • --'---- ---- 7:. ' -- ' - ' , -4. , ' - ' --- ---=-4, • ;Fq -- - --• ' - ' - =' - -- -r 4 . 41; 71 ` , . -- -r=-- , -..." • ."7" -- 7 . ~_ • . --' ---- 777" - , .--_:. New I mrli. EZZ= 0 , ~ .... , , -„ ~,,..,,,',..,,,, - 1 ".:. , t_3', l ,. i 4';' , .{ , '•. - . 7 , `:::: • ' ':'''''' ' ''''. ' - '',--,'. , .• ' ".. _ .. Ir . .„, _,,„,. ; ‘ :,•-ei ~,,, t,,.L:,--4:;. .. ....... --z,. ~,..,:-",-,- • - -: , --,-..".7_- _::;,-t-'-:•'.,_...-;,::::::ZMIIE-- -',- 1 - -'' - ':"' ''. -. ' ': :. - .. ' ' ' ' ' 7 ';''''' * ' _,. , • . :.V...7-z. , ,-- ' . - - .. - ~, . . _ ~ ''''.. , - . ,, - ...,: 7-: :::-;'.--r.... ..- •-• • "--',;,..,.-.-;,:,-,:., " .' .,. - --- -111 ' - : '''' • ; ....., - • ";..:' -, ,2....., ~...:„. -:...,,i,,. ~..,..., , . -,.... • - 21 ` 1 ' S. '.'7, -' ' .. 1 .. ' - ..-• ' .- -; .--- s . - . . ..- " .. ,—. , . • .. '' • zipto ~,•0 . -..4. . .. .. • , . '. l . , IP -- -. '--, ' .- .. ,- - lyt .- - -..* - ~ , f',l- ". •,- ,-. : • .-.--./..,- ' - .. : - =-:- .. 1 '-, ‘: AZ:I . i( : ..z.. V, .:: - .i.*•• `.' --',: -.- 11- 4 5 :451c4:,..- -..-... ... . ...r. . . . • :,. : - -I'-:-• - ",- -.- i fl '.•.- --- .- -. '---'-:/?------_-:----_,,-- 4. ... 17.- •= : ";:.' . . : -: =t 2- _,,_ --_.; - - - - -'. -- - - - , • -- 0 .. . . kBusHED:J.Ey:ERYIsATuApAy.:.r.m,o.RNITG:.:.ig:' - -.sy/ii:ejmo....:•i3.ANNAT-,;:: - .p:o.17$y:It..itx;':.c . 11Jyt , Xii .. ..pii:ry . : . .:. : m.i*myAis 7 R:!' •Pier .I.IIIOLRf3ANI , BlitrrEiS OF •.• . Vint}WARY AND: LOC . UST .gOI.7STAIN COAL; • Shippers of other . aPproyed.tinalities WHITE AND: RED ASH .COAL..„ - • : 81S Wainnt Street. • • . , - 9 Trinity Building, - New York... . cot of Bilby & Doane Street, Boston. • 'Feb. t 6 .3 •" , T. • • ►'icr ri.ti..lt LEWIS AVDEN7IIIED & CO., Wiaol44alG Eielers in the be . st citrieties' of. Anthracite and 13iturnimms • . . 205 Walnut Street; Philadelphia OFFICES;. 110.Broat;way, New York: - Street:Um:ton: • . . Pirineer Shippers from Eltzabethport, or . • • . LEHIGH, SPRING MOUNTAIN, lIAZLETON, AND • corscaL RIDGE COALS, 7'53 13- IP.ier.ltio. 9. BANCROFT, LEWIS & Co., • MISEP.FI AND' SMITE!: 171 r.: .C.elebrated - 'A flii,-*IND :COAL; FROM MATIAI,iOY MOVIN"TidN OFFTCE-1U . Walnut Street, Commercial. Building; • New -1 ork Office-7T Cedrir Street. Bo4toii .011106---7 Doane strLet. • • LUct..‘23;-,55. • -•7.lincEns ...SIIIFFERS OF, TUC . cntt.l3n SPOHN VEIN - FRED - . A5H...;00AL . " niineer Co„ which we. g !farm (Cr to ship fret front ntixture with other Coal. AI-93 sole ag - ontsfor the .salo of (weo. tiY. Still , : SUperior. Pine Forest • While Ash, and Simko nii l Lewis Veins Red Asia Coal,. .which he i~ N6W j'frol:arvi.l , • Wolusui Philado. OryieEs: ) Raoul 63 Trinity• N. "E": •D. IT. MAAS. • • • • \rm. BRENIZER. Feb 14) .6t36 • • ... • - . ELIZABETHP : O . R,,T;;S . ,r4, - COAL: . A. T. STOUT & CO •• (Successors ; to STOUT & . VAN WiCI(LK) - 'Minors and Shippers of the celebrated FULTON (LE. (DOW COAL, from the Ebben - ale C‘,llteiT, near Ha zleton; Pa., and dealers in the best varieties of; , . ANTHEAfITiE AND BITUBINDeS . COALS:: .: . . Delivered dliect from the Mine's or oil -board of ves-. sell at' Tl - IENTON: IiRUNSWICIii PO . ItT 111C111,101D, - P.A. OFFRCES---44.& 40 Trinity 111 Broadway, New_lkorli... ' : • - •S. VAN G. Ler.S.Tactr. . April 4, '64 NEW :Y. ).K.:: SAMUEL BONNELLI Jr Nos, 43 & 45 Trinityßuildingy sHirmo POINT: Pier 4, ELIZABETIEPOTIT, N.. 1. OFFERS FtR SALE HONEY BROOK 151...5T1,1NG MOUNTAIN AND BUCK MOUNTAIN LEFTIGI3 CO ALS BALTIMORE CO.'S bi BLACK DIAMOND NVII_,E..ESI3AII.BE COALS, AND Tng ciaxismvrtn• GEORGE' 6 . OI4BERLAND 00AL May •!1., '44. 21-1 Y - DA:S-IEL • D AhiEL PACKER • 3:ISE:TuB 431" • L:ll.ll,iiP.‘ll-11.7;111:t. Cll.l:l2.bVrtand9 and Elk nil!' (as. Coal . : . 1. . • Company.:.: • • • CO_A_LS. Vi4:lo:—No. 4 Piiieirecit, Now York. 6stithei • •• • 41-lc MiTHOUU:A..F.OULT; 11INEliS,AND suirrEtts ,OF THE CELEBRArED BOS'i'ON RUN LO.EUAT..III.OUICIAIN-1. COAL. 2 . .ll3Xlcrat F:t: N. York, ill itinndway Agt. at Now York—J. 13,1 E 0 . ILLEPP JE Sl:tic:Li-2.4, _ --- DAY, 1-I.ISDDE & Co., 3.ID.;EItS AND SHIPPERS OF ANTHRACITE & BITUMINOUS 00/-114,. No. 100 Walnut St., Phil:l(l2l,phi% - 111 Bloaaws...y, 'Trinity Y, 7 Doane Street, Bosion, JAS. , C. B. C0:.A 7, T.• GILD W ELL. CONANT 'B5 'Co.., 119 Itrorild sva Mt.,. N. Y• ,t`I'DOLESALE DEALERS IN.. C S.. LEiIIGIL COUNCIL ItibaI , :,, , WILKIiSPAIITIE, 3IAUANOY: 'MOUNT-.. NIN; •CC',ll;lntL.tN Jul( ,AD- • TOP:, • • • AND:Q . IIIEn YAMETIES: ,Feh '24; .66. I. • :, • -- sAr . . . • . 7 .11E nridersign•ed are noir prepared to • . • fill rirders.for Lark:h . , Wyoming. Shill milli in . ; ,Schuyl kill, .White and lerd Ari; Cainbcidand and GA*. C'errid—tram Matich , Chunk on, the Lehigh Can 4; kklutylkill IlaveM:Port carlion and Port Clinton. on the Schtiylkill.Canal. and from Amhoy,•TrentoMMolaikenand Port Rich mond. for shifirtimit MA:and - North.: . '. : Ill7FlOrdete-sent to us will reectre prompt attfrltiOn.: . '. ' % • ' ••MARL Al'i* &-, i.s.w - rox, • rooms 70 and 71, Trinity Lluilding, New Yotk: ' March 10 , 00' - ..• - • • . - 1 10-ni , .. • 1 , : . :...i l I . - - -4-- . - __ ,. ..._,,,, : e . —_ . 4 , 7 —t - r t -r: .... 1 7:7 .c.. 1. - . . . •-• : .T.). E ..r. ) Ell I C1:.,"!-S • - • • . • . COAL , HOISTING ItiOHIATE . -.-- 1 - • patented' . . . ••- • .. . - : . • April 11 . 1841311.: • ' ... . thiti celebrated and' unequalled Coal. Hoisting Mi. chine has be , M . ; In suCcestattif - operation for' over-three years, and the unusually. lame . number already mold are • giving the moat . perfect :Satisfaction. It is simple and durable, hiving no gearing at all!, is rapid* hi Its noerfiL Aim and very slay for the . horse. • Descriptive .Clrml lar. -emit/titling • letters of. commendation , prices, 4c., • sent free, on application, .. " .*: " ..: ... •-• • • .• - - L. & P. K. DEDERICK.. * Sole Mminfactnrerr, -..- - •• • Albany Agr:lcultuml and•Maitine Wortm. .. • . March 24 .66 11-Gm .' : . :.. . . Albany. N. Y. Maannoa aNe YorrarcL'i Vilma are .reti,aitu;4l. 1 . 4 HatureLD'a Exrcaer 13ccinr, OcL 'W.43 Gm. . . IL': Pot aloes ! F Joh . rotator", 'l' of all kinds in Rackages to *ttnit purchaFera: .Aleo a tine lot or Pot - Mona on bautVin4 for pate cheap: by Feb , 1 6 , V 0.- • •• : BEes CORM': I will teach you to pierce the Bowels of the 'Earth; and brink out from the Caverns of BlotMtatns'ffetibi to - Our . luulds and suhlert all Naturist* ouirumsand.fpleasure.--DILJOHNSOL dASTggR; - .STIGENEY , &.WELLINGTOT •. .aitd Shitipers or Coal. - IthrnsidO (froni their turaside LoL at Shamokin). . . '.l.4 . ivis Vein (Rctl:Asb): , .. • Locust o (Wtikte • • ' • . . • • (35 Trinitiltuilsling..New York,' .• .. OFFICES ; Walnut Street., PhiLulelphia: • . •115 Kithy Street, • • No. 6, Port Ricbmitndi ..rob 24, .66" . ['gay 16; '63 z -20-4] •••• VAN DtSEN, LOCHMAN d. Co., LOG UST MOUNTAIN, LOCUST GAP; WHKFSDATfI . HE, ..LT.HIIGD; AND OTHER '. . .. . .. . . . .. . . . . WHITE .AND *RED . ASH COALS • I kgents for, the sale of the celerbritted Cteorge4 creek ,Clumberlnnd Ceal; frrnia the Nines - of the Con.' eolidation"Poal and lion Commy the, Illarylnoil. - • . . . . SMITING ' tIIII . I2VES :. EiiMb'OPOrt, .., . - .., ~ - - I. Thaltimore, C.eereeton n_ - . • , • [2ol:Walnut Street. Pfttladelphli. •- * ' OFTlCF,S:.Trinity * Thilding , New York. • • , . ••.. - - - .45 Doane St., ;Boston..' .•. - . **,.: • .Feb:ll. 'tl.s. . . .. • • - . . - '... *. 6 ti - 1 . -1 . V.M..14:0".:•.; TER.; 3 - R., '.&. CO:•• . . . • . • .. . . . . • - • - • ..- - • • • - : staens 61:D EITIP/Mll9 or. • - • • . . • - • ... • . •. - • - - . .. wurrr. AN D RED 'ASH' ANTIIRACITE . ... . . . .. . . . . . . . • . . li . S ' • . • . . . . . - • f -No. 20ny . .WSlnut Street, Phillyln . lphia. 17 • -- 01C,E . S! -1; No: Bros No. I.ltertrir St:, N.Y . . • . tN o.2l:•nri •c Donne St., Boston. •. .. Pici N 0.17; Richmond.: . ~ . . . . SCIIUYLKILL CO. • • ••• T. •H. SOHOLLENBEEGER AGENT;. 3finer and Shipper Of the. Colc,bratt:xl • - Maik Heathirliite4sh sand.- Poa4cd.llloun • tain .- Free• Miming. - : ' - PTNTC - Asa- COA.E ; : kill County. Pa: • „ . - - 'April •'J Osl J :C 0 .111 A . Miners nil Shippers of the tielejeated LOCUST MOUNTAIN COAL .. POI ie; County, Penna.' . ..t.wr • FICANg.i.IN 0 IC . It IC 0. Ii • lit:l.lli:fit* bilberry Coal is no•Cv bfAie.ss.. C;ALDW ELL. t.lollD9Nwho. are, my .A , %ents.*: I'arties•orderMis from them, may alwaytlepenil upon getting . altars laticle: • 112 VS :dent SC, Philadelphia: 'No. 111. Broadway :Trinity IDFFiCES ' ' New 'York: . • •- ' 4:No. 144 State Street, • , • • Tremont., March 22,'G2 13- • . • C . LEAKEI!‘,.-aThe submcrilierg Luse N.-) &terra:nal to 'make several leaSttis on 'their prop, erty, - Inoen its the liesrunicv . ..PeOrtnery,:situated. Schuylkill Councy, and 'ln the.linmedinte tdeinlty.of -Tcseita.,e.t. • The ground has becn fully developed, end those de,iritz, a first, rate colliery, caifeldain hue, with:. Out making' any further explerations•ef the same. Nene need tr,altc application unless capable of ereet inc., all the Improvements.. • • Applv'to .DAST. Schitylkiii'DOeen, County, Pa.. : Or to DAVIS PEARSON,- QUI Walnut street, . • ; . , • .•••• • •. Jean:try 7, ' . • . 1.4 f. LOIMERRY:: .. .(IIIEEK:. orattENtiroz - E. i:I'ACti.EII - . . t totn - Agfiefl,,havins;Conso)idated.onr Three e,s hi the Lurberry liereqtta - tram?, t,t ourbasiuete under -the name of. . •.. • • 3111.LEIL GIt..kEFF & Co. • • • • ••• ' "-31 I Llittit. STEES - • • ktIf.AEFF !,:I7TTING • Mr. GRAEFF.' a member of our firm; having atsocni-: led hinfself with 4. IL lIL.A.NIST.ON; >viit reside to Philidelphia and anon!' coal shipped by t itle-Watm . • be unde.r • the .excluaive' 'cuuttul , BLAKISTON; Ity incrimsed care an Anttention in its . preparation, we 'hope to maintain the .rep - plation of imr..ceichrated Lor 'berry Coal.. Purchasers . abroad can rely upon having thict coal shipped itithe very Itek order'. • _ ••• • MILLER, GRAEFF Lt.CO. Feb. 13, .33 ; • WIWI& 'HULL it -004- ' • . • . , ' •, . ; . . . • IM:1111 AM) SMITEILI3.9r SMITH'S .:SP.ItIEG 11101.1TAIN LEIGH .- COAL • • • •- .1 1. 0111t0W16 . Oarbon . .: Cpithty, ..Penna. . . . • . OFFICES ••' • ' • • 322 ViALNITT •Strect,-Philadejphin, EAN SVILL Pa : • - - • : • ail, ttu COPAL T.NE RS P reto ,.< Gore tiet.Ween the subscribess under the 111 - ntor.J. M. Freck & Co., liir mininz:andSellitig 'Coal id. Ciditralia,..Coludihia County, Pa., • is :lids day by mutual consent. Either party will in 1 iquidat ion. • - ' JON NR. I3LARISTON, Feb. .'• . J.-M. FRECK. " • . . • .• . _ 'TIME businvsg of: the late 'firm -will be continnet: by the atalerricyed:• who has appointed rt6iliermci . l ct"; Shiner. Office :111 Walnut St., Philaaelphia. eie agent.: for the sale e.,al'in.Philadelphia• and EaAmnia: Centralia, Marell 1., 'Coitt..6 l '. - . J. I.E.FI'-ECK. A Large: - Ash ..Ccilliery; on ...the Mammoth', (20 Cert. thick.) Black Volley, (10 feet thick,) and other Veiue,.• • • " • . . . . . ' . 'drlyen, I sChittes, .bendings . and ',breasts and everyltiing ready to,:atilp a large clonally of tl - e Best Whale ARIA .Conl in thc , in.nrlnct for Family in6c. Ali 'the necessary steam engines, drift cacti, mutat:bases, T rail. iron, tlinber,- Powder, Oil, &c.,•&C...;.with a•breaker, rollc cereals, and every: . thing uced-ln reining and preparing coal on the, proper. • ty, will be sold with the colliery. Andy to • . • • • . • • JOSHUA LIPPINCOTT,' • gnrnr¢ r s Pr LE HIGH. DISSOLUTIONS. FOR SALE. COLLIERY- FOR IN FULL WORICING ORDER. .. , . . . . • '• • . 121 Walnut street, Philadelphia, •• •-Or to CELARLES At...141LT,, ' • '• • . • Real Estate Agent; Pottsville. . , Crisk: . F,ola. SA Lig..—The Tremont. Coal Co. will hereafter be ttte.vencioN or their Coal. and are noir. ready to redeye °idea. for the i.everal sizes.. It is the . determination • of the Company* to taste special pains'inthe.nreparation of their Coal, so 'that it &all be of the, best quality.' arrangenicuta are Mule. for shipping to all paints~. east tir south. .Orders for the prestatt -Rent 'to the Mice. so.. 23.'Etrehange -I.lcilding.'Pallailelphin;will • be promptly attended to. Otlices in, New IL ork mid Boston willopened. dar gthc-sea.ein. • • GEO . ..'SANDETISON , Yrest. ' B...E.CliEL.Geneittl,Coal inPhiladelphia. March - 1 - 2, • • 0041. 3111VISS FOR SAI.E.—The under .signed wis.llo to infOrm the public thstlie' tits a Small Colliery for sale on liberal terms. withthe privt 'Atte Of °poling oct.toni or.flye other vales of Coal. ali Above waterrletel. • The etiove-mme Is in working ord. er c and. am at pre.seut ship . from six. - te eight cars per dny,:.whrch. earl be - greatly Increased by. opening other veins,: winch can be done at a very small outlay. - Ad r bILA§BALL I'otiFrille. •• • : . ' 11-tx . . IitAINTIPAdTURER •OF . . ' . ; • COAL SCREENS, • . the :Latest null ..11losit. Approved • 'Stiles. . . The undersigned who Is .a practical Screen Menefee , truer. Informs. Coal Operatorw and others. .that be Is -rnanufactanng a new COAL SCREEN, patented June 21.1864. and .another - patented lAnnrost 8, 1865. ' BE GUARANTEES TflaT XESU - WILL;..AL , WAY RETAINITS. ORIGINAL. SIZE UNTIL EN-. TIRELY WORN - OUT,. • ' ' • •• He respectfully so continuance* continuance of the patron 'age heretellwe So liberally bestowed upon hint. • ' • . •••• ,10-•• . 'JOHN 11:DIEH31. • Eailread St.: rear of - Eaterley's Eardw•are Store, . Nov-4, •66-41-tf PLEITSVILLE, PA. SATURDAY ..,AtoßNlNvii-ATRIL;.7.,-..180.-0 HOTELS. . . OUSE; " AMERiCA:INT ' . 1 - 1 • . . • POTTSVILI 4 E, . • • , . • • • . • • SC:I:3=EELt COUNTY', . - •U.' S.. Is T EWOOKEIL . • :This.“llouse"'having been. closed for the Past fonr years, linkbeenri-openedin such style al , Will in every. particular meet the ts - tatta of the pnblic. '• The latest: alai meet 'deei ruble iinproveineutshave been introduced . : in every department. '• Large 'and spacious Halls; beau,. Alibi 'Parlors, Sitting Room,. Private Basineqi, and 'all the couveniencds inak.requirernents for first 'claes trade. 'Chambers. with uninterrupted ventilation, etch handsomely hirt&tied 'with sold walnut: :superior' hair mattritsses and Tuckers hair:rnliA springs; Battu , : I', Bars. Billiardtt " d:c.: • .Each have: their respective partnienis furnished in good taste. Large nient stabling:lg_ connected. with the -house under:the ownership of 'Messrs I - Ee...l3rewn- and Jack :Le.vet' 1 . nameswhose are sufficient to 'guarantee that. no neg-'. leer, will he allowed" itiAhat department.. In tact; nothing has been spared to make —The American ., the . 11m:se of Schuylkill Connty.• The lessee - having-an ' . expprience of seine. fifteen 'yeara inbtisiness, during, which' time 'fiariuy been .Prepriet4 of `•The Uniott,"Arch Street, - Philadelphia:: also : -Eplunta Mt: 1 Spring,s„:" Lancaster C 0.,. Pa., and. beat operation.. 4 ., the Caine time, will give' at least Some . asoirafice,ol; competency to . Cater for, the public taste. • -• • ' • Julr22, . . • • • . • ,• _ 170; 172 . .174, & 176 Green , sipb..Stre6t .. '.• . I "• , CO3EsQtrAir.i. - wir 07111130.93;1i..12.), ',' • neIIWCCEI Goui ttawrt ITes 13 tw .,;111...N.0r4?, . . • .`JOHN PATTEN . , "JR., ?amt.-imam • • . • ... . . The PACIFIC ROUE:IS:WeII and widely: known to, the traveling The,leeation 'is - especially §nitit- . 1 ble to merchants and.linsiness Men it is in elbse pros -1 intity to the business pallet' the city".„-is on tbelagh- ; way of mthern and Weaern traN:el—and adjaCent" to ; nil the inincipal Railroad and Steamboat depots:• I The. Pacific has liberal aecohimodat ions fur ovei'3o6 l guests ; it is Well : furnished . ..and possesses. every mod ern Improvement for the comfort and entertainment oft its imitates. The rooms are:spacious and well.ventila.: - 1 ted ; provided with gas end . water ; attendance' la ;prompt and. respecti ; and the table is ienerensly pro vided with every delictai , of the season • • - . • TheSubScciber, who, for the past few . Vears,'h as been . - the• DOM.. , sole proprietor; `and IntendS to iden tify h'ittsel c. thoroughly with the interests..of.his With long experience . as tuitel•keeper, trusts by. metier-tee charges and a liberal tolicy, to maintain the vivorable repetition .of . the Ritchie Rotel. • . §ept: 2, , 65. JOHIN. lOATTEN,.Jr. "INITTD S • .11 °VEIL:, .-Broa . 4l . l4tria.; Tnnanqua. OEl'7 D, H.' *I • LCO X, Pfoprietor. . . - . . . . :The United 7 §tateS Tit:tells well and: widely. known to the traveling pnblic.• Iris pleasantly heated in.the centre and business part Of the town and neat the 'Railroad Depot :- leis .well FuritiOw.eli . and po,t-1 sesses every modern improvement for the comfort and Clitertaintbent of its FICIIIITCS - - I.lre. Yoonie are spacious 1 and well ventilated: provided • with gas and. - mater the atter:dente is - promdt and respectful ; and t,tie•Ttl , . late is well . 1'.ro:6141611 with the. best tire Market:- anMs. :. The - liar. is stocked With.- the choicest With along...experience as ahotel-keepor,. the Mo. • Priottfr trusts; by-wider:de chargestind a liberal poii,• torct else eslitire of the publie patronage. • • ' '- : •:: , N011:TH-WESTF. , w1IOUSE, Centre EJt.,,.PoUwrille.'Pn.. rillEE. undersigned .would respectfully inform . : hi s 1. friends and the public in general, that.he has taken the "well-known "Sash-Western - Rouse," reeently.oc t _ eilpied.byldr. Pirtle' 11111...iii.the Iforj:•• . - • eueli .0f1Poll,;ville. 'and will devote ~.. 77 .;')_ ... his:whole time and attention to mak- yr k i-i i- lug . - his guests - cottitlrtable... The 1 , . hofise is laree and , commodious: ..Rii 1 _ - -i . 'Cable will f,e - stippiied , Wit h .the best,'.piovisions the market afford& and his,linir will be stoczed. wi th . the choicest Liquors. • There are • excellent find extensive - Stankn4 and,Slied& - end '2 largo' - yards. for. Drovers, un der the superintendence of . a'good and reliable Hostler.. connect eil-with'. the' Hotel. Ile therefore . respectfully solicits a fair shaC,e of the public patron:lee. - -- .. ':April 29, itl..-11..tt - ;:.. , WILLIAM STERNER. . cime CENTRE.ST.,.P,OTTSVIIa*, r JACOB Prop'r. April: '0 UNITEDO.TI 4 IL, N. Y. - & 116.: 4 7.en &Western 3. Be;ch Street, flosion: B. F. M..FRA'Fr, ibrineri%6itii American . Mdse..- . 'May' 13. •u 5, ITAR,DWARE. . • ~ .-'GEORGE'BRIGIIT .-& Co;, - ARcnl~ for, PETE “ Rupimtup.“.; AVTIRIOAIT CABLE CHAINS - . . In - all it? bfanchef,. from 3-16 totinrh. BeS Proof and Ths , t- Best f,,r Crane- and .ensl mines. •Abi Mitdre , Chains ; the iddy kind tv.ied - how in En tripe for : Autz 19, . .LE WI S 0. .T 11 0 S 1111111iWARt, CtTLEltic 11071,; LS lc., IlAyor.” A. PUBVIES. . • SON,:- ••• •. - •.. . • • . • Scrap Iron and . Inerebana, • • ••.. • • • - A C IM7: A ,PO t.3,1' PRY ..1 7 1 s Ei;s. • „\-. 'ent-nerld'' SO CM ,f 7 l'E -V N itml No. 17 SoUTH Streets: .. • - DEL:had. ' Nerd C , ;14,14. Ingot Blass, Resl, do. dn. Yellow,' Pig Thi.,l3ar Tin: Pjg:tetid. Bar istad: Slpeiter. Antimony. Babbitt 11Vetal, 11isinnth, - Slders, Rae' Iron: Sheet Iron, :Sheet 'Zinc; btecl, W - max. Cracibles. Foundi - y .Anvils,Old hlcials. Old Copper, Old BffNe. Old LAd, tc.. &c. ••• • -2 . • • • riw - New . /L11,(1 Second-hind-Machinists. andi Black, &ChM:* Tools, -and Steam Engines, bought antliold. • rIF - Articles 4t-every description - in ::use -by Machin ist , and Folindrymen.lunished trf order. • • . :.• .• Cash paid for Scrap Rails. and all' kinds p Penusyl'a Beniificial Gift As.Bociation Willtift , ,!.ribute.MrMog.itiltlemberi from , $5OO •to ss;ooo:Everi.lllonth, .; coislsting sof. . Pianos, nelodeons, • Watehes or all Hinds Pistols;.:'• Guns, &t. "'BUT "NO BOGUS JEWELRY.`. . . . . We sell a Certificate of niembership and one package of our celebrated Jet Ink Powder, which gives' the hold eran opportunity in addition thereto; of . receiving one of the above splendid-present&, • •W4S•distribate . ..i 1000. Pig egery,,thortsand. 'packages .sold..,the gifts ranging from `l4 'cents to.-.slooo, aixtord , ' :trhe Association will re-prirchaig..fregt Dap ' of the gift any at-Sete-it the usual ...wholesale price, and pay fur, the same , in rash. if he go desires. :We make this Statement...to :mare .Pstrons that we are not ' putting in low priced artleleft at high prices. : Two'disinter&ged'persona will be chosen to niakO' the diStributions, as we do not • determihe who . _ Shill re 'ceiverthe gifts, hat BlLLlPiYllttelldp4 forwarrlia,g them to Th vnterPrise. , authorized' by U. $. lioense,and : the method of distribution secured by copyrtht, • : • ' SEND $1 25 .FOlt A CEATIFICATI4 - AND. SE, CURE 'A'SPLENDID GIFT. . The distribution for March will take plebe Barre, Pa., on or about the "oth. when a will:led pirpti lir will annoonee the result.' Address .. .. • • ' J; U. P B.U.NIPOrt Cliatoeiy ... a.* • Usirtth 3. 1 0 • ' ' v•= 1 " • ===M=:= • Cir SR :31063tir /01111:2fiti.) • . • • • • ' • Arens, NEVADI3:FeIi.,IIth, i 816.. • .Erwmaki T.—Bence - leg that es deeeriptioti. of 'this place: and the !Mites in de§ : vicinity woald be of :some interest to your readeree I have lotted doWei a few' Dein+ thereof. hoping eon Will give Wein atplace•irt the alumns•of •yotir very valeahle paper: subject is one havine, ane affinity to that. eke welch the Jotereeeels:the justly considered 'oracle eefettemelye . relining it* pnrereteee '.• .; •". .• •- . But before speaking of the minee I.wiel given glance atAustin,- it being. the entporittineof•'ther Mining .to-' '0011 . ..• .Its geogiepteral position is near about the rem , ere of the State:and - thee-mit:Medd drive,pri the map as ennexplereste Mid is therefore not' named. on the last published etude of the United Statee. e It-is note:' .some four Yeare•einee the flret Bruise was eeeeled, bet at the . present thee ,theeity,hae 'same 6000 inhabitants: For a city that is destieed to enimber, its .tens. of thou sands; theleratioreis not the muerelieible. Lyingin a Canyon thetsereee as a paesthreugh the Teyabelqoun eeekeerbere is'necteearily but one main tercet. longand 'etragellng,:on either aide of which:the mein portion of . 'the town is built; and iheeenettleof. it is I should say, .riftent two and a half miles. Though weeraimot,bueet of any great public balldipefeestillethere are plenty of stores. shops. ram aensurate to. the e-ariedWante a the' community. . Hera• is also: the. 'fleet National Beek located on the.Pacifie ceeselmeeng capital of. H200,50e, end which went inee eperatien, a few. menthe Against it there has heel leech oppesitiou, more femme:lst banktire.and merchants thee the maskers of the. 'people. -.Bat es the benefits:of that institution are be. ginning to make themselves felt by.the facilities Afford ed to . the influx of :Eastern Capital, this opposition is dying out, and I doubt not that in another year Nevada win' Adept the NetienaleCerrency ns Its.. basis— You. musette; .conclude from this hostility to the National .Clurrency that the people of this State are or have been disleyal•to the Government. :It Mises solely, &one •the factthat they have' always. been accusionted to hard ,money heels.•end habit'and:eiletom . have more do 'with it, thee anything elee, 'while 'there isegood and talielat reason x by ehe.(the State).did not pirnish her, gneiss of 'men ter thesteifireseaion of the rebellion.—the 'need of creeps here ou the frontiers for the; protection of setelers and immigration. from laitutrincursiene and re ds. • She has certainly fureished her share of men ty e as the statistics of the..santuue' caminissiOn: wif shOw. anteaa . aminstance of the liberal"spirit shown by this people in at time. or needed will relate'n circumstance • that occurred here in the eunimer of.tfirel. . 'Two of our, most premineut citizens,laid a waeer ou the result of a municipal election 'about. to' be held here, the substareae or - which was thaellie loeer was to carry a sack of ileur 'en hie:elle : elder front one end' ef.the town to the other. e dist:ince ef over thee miles,. without stopping by the •way to test: •R. H e Gridley, Req., eras the' one who lode' rind : orf the appointed day, with banners and a hand of mesice he ehrinidered' the seek 'of flour: endetarted r his Liends followine in peocession.behinde Ouringbie whole progress, he'Wee cheered by the peo ple thaelineabetb sides o Vibe etreeC who had ttSitelll- • bled to•Witeees the retie-as : on a: gelaelayeand he Wee 'looked at more as 'a c inquerer• than ' the conquered.ee. After the fearhad been performed, .the idea occurred to him that he might ,turn to good aceountene great con course ef.aseetahled people. ,_So tie minuted an empty *keen sitandieg. near, by, and deelered it to be . his pur pose to put. up the sack of flour he had thetdayrarried, to the highest bidder, the proceeds, to: be given to the temitiwyeCommiseiore 'proposition 't greeted with great applause. and the, bidding 'crinneenced. It knocked off to the • hitthest bidder at seek. The purchaser. again. put. it bp, andeigain it brought. .seun. .The 'teeth if. the whole. Was over-s4tloo in cold coin.. which Was immediately remitted to Dr. Bellows ofethe'. Sanitary. Commieeion. Wire ewes .then -in Han Francisco, Gridleyethenlook hie sack of: float to Vire . glum City, this State, and to eacrementohnd Stet:Fran else.; Cal .repemlng. each 'place the eperat fon -oh kielleme be same:we:lad dene here,' but illways with the proviso tact the Lee purchaffeiewae.teleaete the eat of dour in benefited' his hands forehe benefit' the Commission.": • After.. arriving at. SeieFratielecti, lie.' conferred With. :Dr. Bellows concaenerg hie future preceedinee• with the sack, for he 'hail already become. -ntingllS: • The:-result •:was. he . iitade-the • tbutorthe 'Atlantic Stelemyrith it ; ',and the. final result was.-he added to the. funds of the. Commiesidn Over ,szon,oon, and made himself Centime lerhis connection with the said seek of flourewhich Was Memel,: all -over the loyal Stateseas the "Gridley 'sect: of fieure , 'Thee it-will he seen, that from All-Ob scure' circumstance a great deel or geed arose.' that 'ethe• erwiee wijuld-neeer have..been e accompliehed. Dre Bel lows in a' late report: stated that the Pacific:States ' , alone contributed mere to the Sanitary Commissionth an all, the other States puteegetber.• • . . • Begging the reedere' pardon for hailing made this West : lon, I will again take tip those tipples whial start- The licit - thing of itimortaeee to us as e eityle our water:we:las, Which supply us while a 'sufficient quan tity of mountain spring water. the reservoir of which ea se 'situated that. with. ordinary hose: the water. can be ' thrown o ter the highest hciiise in the, city.. e• . Then we. have an' uadere e round sewer running" the - . Wholeleegth of Main street, which ii•of entleaent cepa- . .city to terry oil the water caused by rains 1311 d . 111pitilig snows, which rush down tram the Mountain sides.. pike: 'venting great damage (het evenle otherwise ensne.-- ; Besides, we :have an- efficient ere rampany 'with .a - good machine, that. are 'ready to - arouse to the. .call - of - duty.hat.whiche forte:rarely, trees mit been required. 'to do emelt duty as yet. for we have as eet, beectspared those calamities that 'hive usuallyeiceurrede to meet new' milling town.. Theee. thinge of themselves per-.,: baps, de hot show mach. only so far :as to. indickee the . spirit of prectreseepervieling the peeele,. and inaenucte i./.23 ittrietpeakine oft city scarcely four years °:1..: '1 . The fleet mine • locateti here was discovered-in I eile, by a ..pony.exprees rider, who had come, up. the Canyon to anther wood, never dreamitte , tea.. to he the temtele instrurrient of planting a. busy and populous :city:where-then' Were-nothing visible but stunted pitie mud . piles upon piles el grey gr mite e hot having beep a. miner. in California, :he noticed something in •the• ' quartz that 'showed metal. and immediately claimed tel 'certain number of feet After the fashion of the Califureia e . . - • Tife report of hie discoveries eenn reathed Wash° and • Celifereia, and hendreele docked in. Other and richer . .mines Were, discovered, :mil it soon because a.fixed feet .that this Reese Meer Ittereen was destiped to be kuover .iteeteicc of the rieleet twitting. eitim ries on the me:eine:it.: eiewhat Is known.as. The .Reese •River Region: theret is embraced some thirty or forty mining districts/6f • about ten square meeseeaelt : each hay ng a mining re-. corder, inevuose Whale is kept. all ankle" records and. is a eepar.ite:and dittinee -itertention from. the County :records. Iu tine. the • Celltrili • (HSI there• are hbone three thoulkane airtime: recoteli•deeaeh claim averaging one ebousand feet. New; it is not to he suppoeed' that • alttltusodainis,will preen - good paying mines. but if even one-teeth of Ahem' prove good, it will -.add im mensely to the wealth of the country • It werielbe less forme to attempteto enumerate those teat have' . :been preeen. geed mtiliesebut among the teeny ratty • nwetion the Oregon, North, Star, Savage. Whitlach:. Whiflach, Yekee Blade. Morgan uncy.. Di. rem &CO.. all of which, are prancing. 'ores that work. trine *elle to.slooo eer ton: Are toette.nnniber of mills; there are le ..thie city seven in : operation that crash . ahout five tens eech pee day Two more are in course of erection, tee rapacity . of which will he ebotii ten totes each .• teethe mills already In operation in the outside districts,. lerannot site, exactly. but I believe there are about ten: atiuntingthose.alreaey finished and those in course of erection.. ' • . ' • .. • : • • -• One :of the finest mule it 3 timelieystoneemtweney' teitineemilleeittedeil about one soda half miles from the . • city. Its cost is iliont sthietino. and for splendid :work as net to he ..stirpaeSed in. the-State. • They.commenced rem:bine last'week for the fleet time,.and the Superin-• eendent informs the the machinery Forty miles souther( here : is the Bunker' Hill District: where they lieveeeeme Site -mines, fur enough developed to warrant 'a New York. Company in- erecting a forty 'seine) Mile jest re melded. Going-split further south:: and one hundred miles from here is the. San' Antonia District, where the. celeeretedleberie Mine is located,. 'wilts ale), :Mother, mill ensegeing into operation.' By the:way, one-third of the Liberty is owned by a Potts ville boy.'eel. Seitz. eGeoree has 11 good thing 'there, :and his mends in old:Pete:will° need. not be surprised to Sere bias comeback there before long with. his pock ets' fllletteeith ...rocks." Before there, had been a mill. there, the Liberty reek Was:worked fierte all of twOraned. over. sitoo .psr tent but new that they haie a nell lit their owe'districeethey will save the expense of hauling et farewbich is a large ' i te r m in this country -=. San Antonia on the 'Sonth. and 'Cortez District on • the ' Northare:the ex - teethe' petide of the Reese: tiver Re-' gene the destanee between the two. hertz. , about one hundred and, fifty. miles.;' The ecandrY lying between • .these two pieces hes been pretty well prospected, but there is yet mach•te.be done in .the way o: develop ment:. Ithouglehas been dime - though, in all of the dee trietee Clint 'in. ire' especially' those in the vicinity or. AnStine to warrant. me in mayrne that our region cone .tairre elmetlant -mineral wealth, and that if iiivestmeete e.re niade • With .care 'and judgreent. and the property teenaged with ireonoiny and basinees great for- • times maybe made, and the' treasure, so. much needed brought the usesed the remetry; ." ' • .. The general character of Our ores may be said to be' teactafee, and nee reduced: - Stilpeirrate, Chloride aud Ruby •Iteethe predominating, vartetiee, although. i there.are all of the kinds foetid that' re enumerated in: our scientific boot has been the case here that all or eiteirlyeill of the-eurface.ores Wive been of the Chia 'ride tericte: but as soon as the melee 'comee to water. then the Sulphurate contra :hi inearieblye -The-average .distance to the water-line .i.s.abont onedunidred and fif ty feet from the, sarfecee The Chloride -ores are• the coyest worked becanse they do not teed roasting. and.. is only submitted to the ordinary process of amalgams- Hone; whereas the Sulphurate erect. hive to be roasted before the eame per ventage-of silver can. be gotten out of it that:: the Chloride Will niodoce without le We Mace now. arrived •atee . .period in our milting history where more capital will be required ie raising and redu cing the ores than heretofore, because a „great Many of the mines - are now work-ed. - down to the water line. and : expensive punipiiv and hoisting :niachinery will have to •he erected before. further work ciao be prosecie ted; previous to which time the process of ,mining" was .very.timple, end - . the expensee comparatively light lit proportion to the richness of the ores extracted:. Most .of our leading mines have 'now hctisting engines, at least those that have passed into the hands of -eastern: • capletlisee whlch 'will inevitably, tie the case with most mines all throughout' this,conntry..for it has: become to be an understood thing. that ineordee to Work them profitably, capital, will-: he • reenired.. which •the great ! mei:jetty:of those now.ownieg Metes hive not got. • It is evident that the whole country iq'in : a state of tranil; from the first diecoverers to these of eastern capi- tailets, and, with. the' far-flighted and liberal-minded of the communiteahls state of tithige with Joe. ter.theyeknow that it means, the sure develop-. meet and future prosperity of the corinery,ewhich they. knew would be' veryeincertabein theliands of the party ' The general coarse ofethe.veine.le N.W. and S. L.' with a pitch of about 60 degrees,,•and average.iri from G Mehra to-6 feel the- ores of .which -twitay from ,$lOO to aki Mee a 5.515,000: $6OO and $S'O per ton Is a pomiton.thing. Oar'rtoll mere tharge..s4o per ton foe. 'Working ores withein roastiege 's.o and' roast it. 'Thee will at the same time:guarantee .to work': it.. within '2O .per eat erdelte aselke. The e& the plan on which' the :greatmajority of the work- is donee :Bat I know - of several :.cases where it has been worked to within.le . and le per tent. of the assay; This. it will liMpereelved by anyone at all cianversant with the process of silver • extraction; La extraordinary good work, considering the althost rude method:by' which it Is reduced. Bet every yearen the last four has seem some improvement added.: and it is.th behoped now that it-is ithoweethatenta. brit:muse silver fields arts :open. to. the discoverer and tapitalietalike, that scientific- Men AVM give it shore. Of their attention than hitherto. end. the process of • ex- . - traction be .brought more to perfection. Good miners can reader : ram:lMM $5 per day ;' common laborers $4 pereday. . This In rain of coarse . or at least coin rates: The opening here for coin, and laborers is very good.' and should it happen .that Schuylkill Comity can spare mpertiou of deer above named cla.es. 1 mead say.come on. ' Here is work for aIL for heaven's sake:don't send atiY.of . tlictse• of whom r. saw: some . very strong. hinta.thnevrabut abOut.in a certain set. of resolutions passed at atertallitown meeting hiald in your. place, for •vve,haveenongheind to spare of the same kip& Bat believing 'I hawS already taken'-up' more _apace than Tim entitled to. I' guilt- leave '. for .another time much ttmt . may be.lideresting to your readers: ,Should pee wish it, I will friim time to limn keel:blot' posted. tialtO the further development of this seettoh. -'••• • - '• • . 'Yours. • - haye to tk • ion- .fo; Abe.ragulsrity with which riky ddsia to tad.-C. ' . . caighet Organs, LETWt FROM ZWVADA. EMM!!:=M== trit...ickr.l.Et ON tie NECESSITY or, P.ROTI3CTEtra OITA INDUSTRIAL IN . In reading (he proceedings' of the national . House of Representatives on the 7th day of , Merch, the ,House, as in Committee, of the . • *Whole on ,the State of the Union, bating . .. . ,tin der 'consideration . the • bill regulating trade with the BritiSh North'American posssionis, we were struck with the force of the remarks Of Hon. Win. to:Kelley:, A portion.'of those . remarks we, reprint from the record !iii, the Globe, with the assurance that they will am . ply repay careful ,perusal, After expressing some of hiS objections, to,tlie billbefore the . , House Mr'Kelley said': • . - . . .•, - • • The gentleman from - Vermont [Mt MO; rill] says the quantity of coal 'Cannot be in creased: •Allow me ao say that_ lam speak ing-for. no Pennsylvania:interest today. I am epeaking'for poor, wasted, war-trampled Virginte. for Maryland, West. Virginia; Ken : lucky. Tennessee-and' Missouri. for Georgia, and all the Southern State% They all need, our festering care, and all have inexhaustible beds Of bitiimineus edellhat ought to be pro duttiVe. lam not willing that the rebellious people of the Smith shall become.n3y politi-. cal master or equatin the : councils of the na tion, until ihey_are politically rezenerated.— But I desire - to develop their natural resoor • acs,, to: induce capitalists, laborers; and , men of enterprise to go and settle . among them, 'and build 'up inaustrious• aiid'Peaceful corn: inotawealths, in the. hearts of whew, people loyalty . to ',the Uniort -shall :dwell. ,It .is in these interests .that I - speak. The bitumin• ors coal interest of eastern .PennsYlvania. is comparadiely unhaportant ; but we have the only paying bituminous coal company . east of the sunitnit cif the Allegheny moinitains.— Thirty-odd millione.. of capital have already been invested outside of, my State. in .this breech 'of the .eonl • trade: Thirty millicins more have been . invested in railroads . town vey, thecoal front the mines to-market, and though it iLi all -unproductive, or nearly so, the owners do not abandon it es lest . . . :They lino that, impelled by a sense of joetice ,or the pride of American citizenship,. Congress 'Will -protect them .nealust the as saults of British dapital and ill paid' labor. They have waited in hope for the day when the, infarnoes treaty which blasted their pros - peets should be annulled, and they . be per-, Mittel -to !enjoy equal: chances, with 'foreign- 1 .era in our own, markets. 'Give theta. but an even chence,. burdened: as • they are by our war take% and all'. these dead -..millions will become productive.'': l challenge any mem ber of the House to name another bi , unii nous coal' company, than the Westmoreland Company that has pint or earned'a divideed. -id the . last three yeare on'the eastern slope of the mountains:': Give them nrotection equal An the takes, . direct, and 'incidental, whiph you impose Upon, theM, And yeu will and that instead -of the product - 'of -1867 being but two million' tons, as it was last • year, we. can .product ninety five million taus, as Eug land did, in that .same year. Our. fielde. are broader and richer than hers. and those of Nova. eata cornbined. _.They- are scattered from'the - mountain above the clouds, on the brows of which Hooker and his brave corn rake fought,. eastward and northward und westward all over over country. Give them but that measure of pretection which under the weight of taxation. they bear Will secure anequal chance 'in our markets,' and they 'will give you an adequate supply of coal. and in two•er three years domestic competition, while it will by patronizing your railroads and - carrying companies have . filled_ your Treasury and enabled yen to- reduce your scale of taxation, Will bring down the price of Coal in all our markets. • - . , Pennsylvanin.l repeat. has no special in terest in this question., HerAnterest is that. the general prosperity of the colantry shall be. promoted:: We want you mal:ufacturers of New t , nglaml to. Clothe' ;he men who dig and • handle our coal ; we want 'you men of the northwest to feed the men who dig : and A' Characteristic Speech -• front Governer 'medic our Coal; and 'Pennsylvania will re : - larowsaloiv—A Diuselosnre abant the to res knee id her share of •the keocral -prosperity ideal and the Prerelltnenho Bakrenu'ltill. . Wilier) INV iI I then bless our country. . Governor Brownlow has been at his home Sir, I turn 'to the fortieth page of the letter in Knoxville, for some days, recruiting his of the Secretary of the Treisury, embodying shattered health. .'At the invitation of the the report of the revenue commissioners, and German Union League of that 'city, he, ad-. find that 'in the fiscal year .1365 there were dressed a large assemblage of his fellow-cit-: le - moiled, under the reciprocity treaty, t 3- izens on Saturday evening. 025.432 bushels, '.being .465,114 tons of :bits- ~ He prefaced his • remark 3 by asking their ininotia..coal, free of duty, from the British indulgeuce, as he - was feeble, but •promised proVincee .There were imported in the same . them to be brief and to the point. He said year, paying tteluty of $1 25-a ton, 6.131,618 that parties,-were.again at work, seeking an bushels, being 218,986 .tons, from England aicendanctr in •the Government. - - The Dem- Therewerakexported of - domestic production, ocratic party, nnder a new guise and new. which, as I have end, was all or nearly all -learners, was again asking countenance from anthrimite; 3;703. ; -261- bushels and there were , the people. The. tiring on Sumpter was a 'exported of foreign production ,25,536 bush- Democratic measure • The - Southern , States els, making nearly 1001) tons:...'.. ••. . - were all Democratic when they went in the Bit- will it be said that the vast coal- rebellion ....The revenue stamps you are now beds of this country cannot supply cur wants, taxed with are Democratic, and so are shirt-- and that:we cannot increaseour production? plasters. ..• .- - Or will any gentleman 'say tbat a duty of -fif I . announce to you - that if Andy Johnson is ty cents, is enough to protect these. embar- to lead the way' in reconstruction., with the. I.:lnca but innlortant interests? I ask. gentle- Democratic.party at his back. -.I go the other men to Mark this factw that' though 465,191 ay; Igo with the. Congress of the United tons came in under . the recipracity treaty,. free States, the .sci-called radicals. Ido not fear of day, from her. provinces, Entrland Was to side with them. The name otradical has still able to send in, and pay :at. 25 duty per no teifrors for me. I have been known as a ton,. the enormous amount of 218;936 tons.- "damned blue-light Whig " and. "damned lu- Is it :not apparent from these facts pot we natie" and I Adult it cheap if they will now .will bankrupt every bituminous coal company- • let me oil. by calling me a "damned rascal.% in the country if we pass this bill ?• * . . There,are "two human monsters"- now en Do gentlemen say our demands in this be- gaging the attentiOhof the, American people.. half:; are exorbitant, .or ask why . Our coal _Their names are on every . man's lips. 'I refer cannot be sold 'cheaply, as that of - England to Sumner 'and Stevens,_• President Johnson and the provinces? . I;answer- them in is engaged in 'a bitter warfare "against them; '1 part by another: queition, which is, do they To abuse these men is the test of the loyalty wish: the ,American miner to toil::'for the Mr. Johnson. prescribes. , They are both men wages elven to labarerein 'English- collieries ? -. of ability and-unblemished private.character. Sir, : the hearilessneas cf the CaPitalists• of Stevens . .has, sacrificed more for the Union England was never more fully expesed than than any five. merrin East Tennessee, and is a by the. report of the.parliamentary commia-. . Leiter mall than any two men who ever lived sion appointed to inquire into. the. condition in the South.: lan not afraid to-endorse of the miaing population of the- country. 'these_ men on my own. " dung hill." IVb England's shame is now Ii re writtetrinbrnad- must all be 'radicals or reconstructed Demo - er or darker colorsthan: in that report, and I • erats. I.Preferto side with the former class. NVIII . I not Permit myself to believe that • any On the negro suffrage qUestion I have only member, of this House is anxious- that we to say that, Tor the present lam willing to shOuld 'emulate that page of her history. be content with the freedom of the !laves,* Our better. wages tor labor and our beavY and WWI the privilege given them to testify' war taxes answer tlie surestion thrown out in the courts I differ from. President John- i How Much..gugland and. her American prew-. son on this subject., He says lie is in favor inces did to pretract and aggravate .the war 'of allowing.negroea. to vote who .can read is known to all', -and I am not willing ibey , who are Worth. $250, who have been in the should derive advantage from their treachery. -army; and of gradually extending the right On this subject I quote a. few Hoes from a let- ' of. • suffrage to• all. - It was through• his ter frem.art intelligent coal operator : • • . influence that:W . 6. sneceeded in passing. -the • "It is almost impossible to compute pre- negro testirriony_bill through our Tennessee cisely the amounvof rev.enue that gevernment _Legislature • '. He wrote letter% and sent tel reans from a ton of 13ituminous Coal,_ but the egrams, asking - men - liters to support the bill. fairest way. to - get at it will be to take the It was through his help. the bill became slaw. cost of putting the article-on board vessel be He went further than I ever did.. I. want: fore the war. (or in 1860, )$3 50 per ton as .them tie be qualified first; , it will 'come in compared`:with the present .cost. -seven del- - time • They voted, in. Tennessee prior to lara per ton . making an increase in the actin' . 1832. ~•- - - -.- • , cost of $3 50 per ton. : This increase is in the I have-sonde secrets :to tell of the Freed-: main occasioned by-the taxes which havebeen men's bureau.lsllL I •think the bill was ob levied in order to .suPport the, government; jectiniiable,. andit might • have been proper (which we pay cheerfully ;) and. they touch • tor me. to Yeti:oat, but President Johnson every - article of provisions and repel's about ought net to have dpne it. Generals. Howard, the mines and railroads; as .Well_as the two -'and Fiske drew up that bill. 'They carried and a half per cent Upon the • gross rate of it to the President and read it, to him, section transportation and five percent. upon :the by section. He favored it. General Fiske net earnings 'of the . carrying . companies: thought. the: expense would be too great,. but which, when all together, amount to the President said no He urged it, and u nearly, if not quite $3 pertoe." : ' . • premised, to sign it if Congress should pass . Sir, we are in a transition age ; and here •I it:lt .went throngli .both Houses:. In the reply to the. remark- of the gentleman from- • meantime got into a personal:quarrel with .Vermont,- [Mr. Morrill] that coal ought :to' he Sumner and others, and when the bill, game,. protected.. ,We are in a- transition. age in i. before him. for his signature he vetoed it, af-,I • more senses than one - We .arepessing from: - ter having promised to'-favor it This is a .war to peeve and from the age of iron to the secret, but true •.. • . . i age of steel. In a few years, if we foster our .-- I ern' in favor of the test oath, and dotal induStry, steel will: supplant, iron in almost wernt it repealed, and it won't he thank God!' all themses to: which It is _now applied. Sir- There are crippled rebels in Washington who, emit and iron are the muscles of modern civ; want to govern this country, and lam op- . Ilization ; and fire -Ignited coal—is a the m •. . pesed to letting' them.-in.... They syrildn't terial force that is impelling us .onward and , help. peen'. the coantry.. President John- . upward. Had the Southern States had equal sort can't carry a single State uorth. of. Ma-; mastery with us :of these - elements; doubt,' eon's line but Kentucky, and I wish, he would: Whether we would yet have made' conquest' carry that State to "hell." . over them. I query whether tlierOnit. might . They. had! forty papers. in Tennessee, and not have been otherwise than it Was. What . but seven of ~ th,etn are loyal. The thirty were Vulcan and the CyClops to an Amerimin three are: bitter,. artful, rebel sheets—many of :mechanic handling a steam-engine or aAripe them edited . by Northern-Copperheads—the hammer 2 We live in a'new . - - age Old my- ' meanest. class. of:men that walk on eerth;— thelogies and traditions serve but to hamper They are meaner thin Judas' Iscariot; fir its: -' We.must adapt .ourselves :to the agen- . nold and Burr. were, patriots: compared to Gies by which we are surrounded and tkeex-... them. •.• • . • igencies in which we are involved •w . .. Our State Legislature is at a lock—twoenty- Sit * *when the consular Wreath' , first:graced :one members bolted, - They-all endorse Pres the brow of Napoleon hehad only cOnAttereci ident Johnsen.. They. have left 200 lunatics Italy, which, in . the somewhat boastful-lan- • and, tlXo'Convicts to starve. '.I have provided { Sw a g e of the historian extended !from the '..money to feed them; if the next Leg Alps, to the Papal dominions :" And .what .. refuses-to refund ihe meney - ,1 will turn the ; had he done? • 'Why, sit all that Italy which crazy and the 'convicted. loose on Idithile be had conquered; could it be •lifted bodily, Tennessee::; It will.be the , best physic they_ ; could be set doWn comfortably within the ever had... • - • . . . limits of •the State of Maine orof.South Car ; - The Governor closed by warning all hia ' otitis.. Be. had never • then: commanded so old friends to stand by the Government. He many men as Burnside marched - through the . predicted that: the South would - attempt city of Washington when taking his single anotligerevoltitiorithrough the hallot-box.— corps to swell the grand army of-Lieutenant If-they did,. be said the Northern hordes General Grant'in the Wilderness. .7 Haw was . would grind them ao powder::' it that we could move such Masses of men, fight this war over the broadest'theatre.of international and civil..war knowq • to. historx; and Conclude it in a. Ilia 'wore :than four EMEE!!!!5=== years?. It.wss *misuse we used coal and Iron as our innscles, and fir =ignited coal— r as our forcer Tlietie gave us'New Orleans, and bat tered down Fort-Fisher. • - . • And I may add that, had there been a well= stocked railroadlrom Moscow to the Rhine, Napoleon's retreat.would have been marked by fewer. horrors, • and; , the history 174' the nineteenth century would not, probably, have read as it dom. , • And if the Chairtnan of .the Committee of Ways and Alcans desires to secure us ti re spectable pnsition'amengthe nations, he *ill not strike down, disparage or neglect the coal and iron interests. . of the country to sub serve any interests of his own, his. State or, section:, They.are the priinordiar elements of our greatnes.s, 'and should be cherished above all others. Look at their power.— Behold a woman with an iron' machine be- fore her, moving noiselessly; 'it is impelled: by coal add iron fashiened into an engine,. and is doing more work. in one day than one hundred such Women could have done in a week one century ago... : Or see yonder pal lid little girt attending inch a machine; she will produce 'result* in one day that would hare taxed the Industry .of her grandmother for a year. The poler of those delicate peo 7 pie is not superhuman,; it is coal and iron' thatlireduce these more than magical results: The gentleman doubts whether the produc tion oc.coal can or should be stimulated, and is willing we should . . depend en our most powerful and 'nearest enemies . for this ele mental substance.' The conntry will.not rer, .sporid to such purblind patriotism.... And the passage .of this bill *lll reduce us to such abject tlependtace. In eleven Months of 1865—1 do not go back to 1864, but take the first .eleven months of .1865, 'fbs last year-sixty-six per cent. of the bituminous coal consumed in the States east of Pennsylvania . was mined by the laborers 'of Britain or of the. British Provinces. Let me prove this.: .The amount .of bituminous: 'coal received:at Boston and New York from the Britishproiinces, free of.duty, to the Ist of Detember,. 1865, was .392,158 tons.. The amount of English coal reeeived at the same points during the same period, which paid a tax of $1 - 25 per ton,. was 103,723; total for coal, 495.891 tons. The amount of coal produced in the United States, delivered dur ing the:same period' at the same points, was but 207,874• to ;.balance in favor , of foreign coal, `108;874_ tons—rue coal company in the • British provinces declaring dividends of one - hundred and seventy-five per cent. in a yea:r,, and' but one of the. hundreds of companies .in our country able to declare a dividend of one 'per cent., makings contrast so unfavorable to Ms - that many of our enterprising people; as -was shown yesterday by the . gentleman from -Maryland, (W. F. Thomas,) abandoned their.- ; country,' and `embarked' ":their capital in the coal' regions of Nova Scotia. 'Can we L strengthen our nountry bTexporttng- enter prise, industry and capital,... • And is it not marvellous that such an ex hibit against us can be made, in view of the facts that our bituminous'coal fields are so much broader and,richer than those of Eng land and Nova Scotia combined, and that we .deperid for the support of our government and its.credit• upon tax derived in . great part fromthe forge, the furnace, the foundry,.the -railroad, the maehine shop, the coal-bed, and iron mines. Are gentlemen willing to, per petuate the 'malign influence that has pro dueed a state of facts . so disparaging to our intelligence ; patriotism and interests? No; I believe they will agree. with me that the time has arrived when .we should develop our own`resources; foster American tabor,. and guard our own interests. One effect of the reciprocity treaty has been 'to send 'to Canada one' million five - hundred thousand immigrants who.- but for .the advantages it gave .the Provinces' over us, would have swelled our population., Let us now, by ta-.. king care of our ownpcople,induce them to come aud.share.our burdens and bles'sings. ILEPIfTBICAN' MEETING . IN Ebro ~;~~,- NO. 14. Kel- GOT; BILOWNLOW, in a letter to 3ndge Of Philsdplphis, describing the state of tbingstaTensessee, says: - • :Ptiten4 eiegats - 401 &id BOOK , PIW/WW, ot . _ -- - , alltetet , the Itooeirloinum.oo - as tie diem eteegether Ocaud-7. such as:.„ - - , . . Madinat books, limsepktittsi, -: Bias or Lanto.Powomm . ---. ",...,:. Railroad Ticket.. 'Vaud 8i115, ,.,- •• '' Paper Rooks, Artieleooriveriaip Time Banco, _ Rill Ilitailo w , -.. , • 51 ..-. . Ordor Books, Re. I At the Mei shortest mem.' (Our skrik.of JOB ' MS Is-more exhmelve than that or any other dhow in that Section of the State, and we keep bands employed es prosily for Jobbing. - Bela/ a practical Pdider muse/ we will guarantee our work be as nest at mufti am be turned out lathe to ' Oitlee. • PRUMMI W Who ORS dons at the shortest notlce • - - BOOR BINDERY. - Boob kneel In every variety of style.- BLuttlleola eti evei y deseriptket tnazwfactostel, be!tod sr*, rtited te. 'When Iput thePreside*bit nomination at Baltimore for the Vice-Presidency I felt that, he had .s o thoroughly committed illeself. to the Union cause, and had been, so .badly treated by the rebels, it was impossible for him ever to-get around to them again ; but Y, give him up as lost to the Union party, and as-the man - .who is to head the 'rebels and- Demnerats. Every rebel in -this country, every McClellan man, and every ex-guerilla chief, are, loud and? enthusiastic in praise of the Pre'sident. The men who but a few mintlis sin& were cursing him for an abbli tionist.and traitor, and wishing hlmexecuted, are now for executing all who-dare to oppose his policy or even doubt its success.'. rairNew York City contains: Stl, churches. of which 61 are Episcopal.. . • ' • • rfarThe Fenian Sisterhood will ;hold , s fair in New York next inorttit. • ' . • /Of - Attorney General Opped hut decided that ° Semmes was not included In tho parole of 'rebel The cops of our Legislature are circulating documentay - miking the tax-payere pay the post- . . . OrTheprisent population of Nebraska is esti- • mated at 50,090, an increase of 10,000 since; list • year's census.' • - - Orin Englishman being asked.how he spelled • - saloon; replied ; "with a hesit,"a hay, aliell,two - hoes and'a hen." • SWI - When that load of Massachusetts women reaches Oregon;-it io prOp.osed to found a city and - call it . SLj cargo.- -• • • • • ail-Dr. Jayne, the great quack Medicine man . of.Pliiladelphia, left 115,000 to .build a • Baptist church in that city. .•-•_.• -• . _ . • - • 00rGeneral Grant who during the war'wore 'a full beard and mustache, no* Wears his fans • cleanly shaved. • OeLucretia Mott, although past the seyentieN ' • preached several vigorous sermons recently. . ; New York and Brooklyn.. ' orPresidont Johnson says the next rebellion may be in Illasaachusetta.- . 01.1 I ' "Is-this • a - dag 7 .• -.• ger - Leee before me ?" . . • .• • OW - Miss W. Anna .Hooper, of Philadelphia. faSliionable boarding. school keeper,. an • accom plished lady, is dead. • •-. ••.• . • . sir Hon. George Chambers, formerly Judge of. .the Supreme Court of this State, died on Sunday -- • • Week at Cliambersburg. . . • • -WAdestructive 'fire. in Sunbury has proved 'the inefficiency of the lire department, - and steps are being taken to reorganize it. . • - ;. Oirln Great Britain the letter his drawn from -. 'ouse, from 'o . pe,.from:'eaves, from 'ome; into hezile,hang-wish, andlanziety.• ' OW - Anthracite and bituminous coal have been found at the Falkland lelan4 The British Gov- ernment intends fortifying the place.. • • • • • ' '• ilieeter-Clyiner,the Copperhead Candi date for proposes to change Ilia .name after the'October election to Hieg erl Clymer. - illae•Geo. Denglix (lied at his residence is Berke county, Pa, •on the 22d ult. aged 66 year.. IS. • • was formerf in the-Legisla ture from that county. , Gentile • services are held:in Salt Like - City , ' every Sunday,. and lectures denouncing polygamy. •. are delivered. These lectures are attended by ma ny Mornione. ' '.• • • - • /*irk box containing $164,000 in bonds was sto- led from a private residence in New York on Fri day week. A reward. of $5,000 is offered for the • tec - .yliry lot the' bonde. • • • -• • air The Delaware and Midden Canal Company' expect to send 1,200,000 • tone Of coal to market _ 'this -year. • Hitherto the yearly aggregate hie never, greatly•exceeded 8C0.,000 tons. . qT some of the Episcopal churches of. Iktewee 'York now the prayer. are intoned,. - and the peal ter chaunted by men and 'boy choristers in sure : , plicee: This is termed "advanced ritualism." . WThe Supreme Court of the . United States . has, decided; Chief Justice Chase diseenting, that the. shares of "banking associations created un- . •der the acts ef•Congross" are -liable to State - tai • . AO - Speaker Colfax bet a lox of cigars with a brother Congressman that the. President would approve - the.Freedmen's bill. He lost, and sent 'the box to the Congreseman labelled : "From a victim of misplaced confidence." • 111 - 01 - • Saturday week in Reading, the Mail - Agent of thelteading and Columbia R. R., John - •Mellinger, was arreilteclby a United States 01E, • cer, on the charge of having tampered with val. • uable letteis. -He was taken to-Philadelphia. • . ear Gen. Nye, in his speech at the late Republi B . can meeting in altimore field very aptly : that the rebels, five-years ago. defied the power of the Government to 'keep - .them 'in the- Union—now they defy the power of the Government to keep them out of the Union. • -.- • , alirTheSupreme Court of Pennsylvania has Ileeided that bonds -Of corporations in the State held by iimi-residents are hable to State taxation. The Court has also decided that the collateral in heritance tax Of five per cent, can be collected on United States bonds.: - ' • . • • •tiirGeorge: Poweisox, a farmer residing . Franklin tp., Snyder county, has lost by disease, since last fall, ten head of fat cattle. It is feared that their death was occasioned by the disease' which has made such fearfulravages among cat tle throughout Europe. - ‘. • • Me - The whole number of schools in this State is 12,548. In : these the -.number of pupils in- ati tendance is 637,587. The average attendance is '396,701. The average salaries of-teachers have increased, those of males being 131- 82, and .of females $2444 per Month. The total cost of tui- Aion-for the year is increased, over 1864„ to the amount of Of two hundredand ninety-eight thous and dollars. The total cost of tuition, fuel, house building and repairing, is about two million and threerque.rter dollars. • . - • gducationat column. J. A. n. passntins, rti.. a., Editor. M EDITOR—In reference ta the question, "Siould the book be used by the pupil in a recitation in mental ,arithmetic?" I unhesita tingly say it should not.. If it is used by the pupil,. one 'of the' great advantaged arising from this study. will be lost; which is .the mental, discipline and training.of the memo ry- Again, the pupil-will hecome very care less and inattentive, for knowing that he can refer to his book, 'he will allow his attention to he divided with other objects. But if he knows he must depend upon his objects." he will be. careful to pay attention. would like to hear from those teachers that allow their,pupils to use the book. . Hoping your questions -will be more promptly, answered, I remain Yours tritly,• X.. Y. Z. QUESTION CORNER. Is it the duty of, the Teacher to visit the parents of his pupils?.,,. . , 1. Give anae.count of the Solar System u now adopted. - . - 2. Name the Primary Planets in' their Ord er from the sun, and describe Saturn. S. State Bode's law for estimating the corn • parative distances of the-planets frclm the /4. - What led to the discovery of, the minor planets ? " • - b.. What are the three laws of Kepler? - ..6.- What effects are produced by the incli nation or the earth's axis? 7. Explain the cause of the tides,, and'hy there is high water on the opposite sides of the globe at the same time? 8. Explain &Lunar Eclipse. 2. How are the constellations of the Lo iliac situated with respect to the signs? arid what is meant by "Procession of the Equl noxes ?" • - 10.. Definer Parallox, Ecliptic; Peilhelion, Apogee and Zodiac. .• 1. Give the . names of the principal unstrat- Hied rocks. 2. What difference is there in the compo sition of granite and that of syenito t. • • 3. What are the most common, stratified rocks? 7. 4. What is meant in Geology by the words dip, strike, ont-crop, fault and anticlinal axis ? -:'s.:Give the two grand dividions In the ve- - eetable kingdom and their aubdivislops [rep-, resent them by, diagram]. . 6. Name the natural divisions of the animal kingdom. • •• . • - 7. Name the four great branches tor types] and give their - deviation , also the number, a living, species. . • - • 8. 'Name the three classes of radiates, and give the derivation of the terms-walso, num ber -of liyjng species. ' In the' silurian: system what classes of the different types are found? • .. • , 10.. In what period does the trae mammal first Mahe its appearanc e? - - • • 1.. Give the-names and-derivation , of the names of the simply elements whichlre gases? • 2. State and illustrate-three of the charao;, teristics of affinity. - 3. State the law of _definite,. propertions, and hoiv it may be proved. ' . - : , • 4. Define acid,.bases and salts, - State the characteristic properties of adds and alkalies}. • 6. How would you form nitric add and ex plain its action upcm 'metals ? •. • • 6. How...would yott , ..obtain-10_dregel4 :and "what is its equivalent, symbol and density.? 7.. In what three alloiropid fords la pure carbon foimd in nature? Give examples. ‘. 8. How". would-yeti , manufacture super , phosphate of lime ? . .,..11instrate,tbe cherelcs) reactton involved, egd ,what purpoae,it la extensively` • • " • • 9. 'How diesti , knowledge of the lawilor ehemistry assist us htsoastinig beef ?:: - 10.; What are the sources ofplaut-growth, sled by. what organs la the notuisbment taken =OM .4.BTRO!iOBIT EC=