Nountal. POTTSVILLE, PA. SAT unakv,. NUMMI la, 1867. NEW YORK —JAMES WATTS, With Cortunt Co-, No.ll9 . l3roidwny. New York City, is authorized to receive. subscriptions for the 1t INEZ , ' JurusAi rind also to collecktaila for the same BLACK BAND IRON ORE, The Black Band, or Carbonaceous 'hoar Or of the Coal Measures, exist as .heds, co •rver.pivo %Ott the coal bed.s, or veins with which they are sir ethic& The rubecriber has made -the Iron Orel of the coal mearnier a specialty. and Is enabled from a lone practical experience to And the principal beds of t me through the. Anthracite or Bituminous Coal . I sm prepared to locate, prOre or develop. then beds cf Iron In all tte Anthracite Regional or through, the =limns Coal Fields. - Pi. 11A lIRIES IDADDOW.J3t—aaIr. Pa. • . StrintENcra —Berd. Farman and Joseph 5. Patter son. Pottmille: "Wm. P. Alloor, Wllkesbarrez - d. Lon. den Beadle, Arhland ; W. W. Blakalee. Weatherly, Carbon Conniy: Wm. B. MarPhatt, Sharanktti: Edwd. Mahler, Jr... Baltimore, Ann:Henry D. Moore, .Pttila del ; Geo. - 11 Potts:Nei' 'York. . ' : • DADDOW'S NEW MAP OP THE ANTHRACITE COAL. REGIONS . This Map la the latest published" of the Anthracite Coal 'Rediona of Pennsylvania: It differs In many re specie from other Maps publisha because It gives the Tormation and also a representation of the. Coal Bow sine. together with the location of all the collieries in the Anthracite Coal Regions, Ice., Az, Price on Rollers.. In case for Pocket In Sheets . . 'M . - - . Do. on Muslin . 1 DS • Do on Muslin dissected - -.. .2 00 Those in Pocket form • will he sent free by nail on receipt of, the atovo grim.. For sale at • - BANNANII Bookstore, Pottsville. MEMORIAL PITRIOTISII OF SCHEYLIIILL COUNTY. Great Redaction in Price. THE LAST CHANCE TO GET THE paw:. In order that all who desire to Protierve this ard of the Patriotism of Schuylkill County itormg the Rebellion, may not be debairedby the F r:ce from poreliaeing,:ave . hafe reduced the price a = follows for the remainder of the edition: In 1.1, -, th, reduced from E 2 50to $1 50 . sheep, (library) " " .2 75 " 175 " half morocco " " • •-325 " 225 " morocco gilt " " • 3.75. " 275 " Ora COAL STATISTICS. —As our edition of the Journal containing the Coal S'atistics is exhausted, we have published the same in pamphlet form, and added the Prize Essays (0 mining Bituminous coal in England, pub lished in the London Mining Journal, a few years ago. Price, 25 cents. Sent free, by mall, on' receipt of 25 cents. Also for sale at T. B. Peterson 13r05., Philadelphia; D. Van Nostrand's, 192 Broadway, New York, and - A. Williams, 100 Washington St.; Bos-. ton. HOOP SKIRTS of a superior. quality, "Hopkin's own make,"—new Spring styles, —advertisement in this issue. Ladies make a note of the fact! GOVERNMENT Property at Private Sale, consist ing, of all kinds of Harness, etc., is advertised in this IPSI3O by Messrs. Pitkin & Co., of Philadel phia, New York and 'Washington, D. C, CATler.rrNaA.—A: large assortment' of elegant pattern—in store of Leedom & Shaw, 910 Arch street, Philadelphia. Also, all other goods in their line. Bead advertisement. Sunßxres trial will probably commence on • • • the 20t1 - 1 instant. TUE Coppet heads have decided not to call Nitional Convention : until next year. . Wni B. Stria recently appointed postmaster at. Philadelphia, has been reject ed by the Senate. Tun weather changed suddenly on Wed nesday. In Minnesota it was the coldest day of the season, the thermometer marking 25 degrees below zero. GENERALS SCHOFTLD, Sickles, Thomas, Ord and Sheridsn have been appointed com manders of the Southern States under the re cent act of Congress. QyrrE a number of our exchanges from differ ent Fl'etioll4 of the State, speak in complimentary terms of Judge Parry as a candidate for the Su preme Bench of the State. , A t.crrEn from Washington informs us that the proceedings of the Impelchment Meeting held in this-Borough nu Monday evening lait, created quite a sensation in the House. Tim Gerniantown Telegraph, a thoroughly good newspaper; has entered upon its thirty eighth Volume. we are glad to know:that cur esteemed cotemporary was never in a more flourishing condition: , • Tun Spring opens with a magnificent Re publican victory in New Hampshire. Now for Conneeticut. The con' est is closerin the latter State but we believe that the result will be equally decisive. Wrin.E many people in the South are in a starving condition, the "chivalry" are bolding tournaments. If they had hearts and nom• mon sense, they would take the money these torn fooleries Cost and relieve their suffering brethren. • • Tim Reading Daily Dispatch has been en- 1,-,rp'd and otherwise improved . ~of the most spirited and ably' conducted of , our exchanges, and its present appearance • gives evidence that it is in a highly prosper. ous condition. BAnoN MuNcaArsEN it seems, is not dead. We observe by a cable telegram dated "Ber lia;March 13," that "Herr Munchausen,. the. Premier of the Hanoverian Government of the late King, has challenged. Count Von Ilisn arc!: tor words spoken in debate in the tivmsu .Parliament." Tun Copperheads are using every species of vituperative language in speaking of that staunch old Ohio patriot, Ben. Wade. They know that in the event of impeachment, Wade will prove a far different man from An drew Johnson, and that traitors and Copper heads will receive no favors at his hands. COTIBINS'A ILLESTILATED DOMESTIC BIBLE which has recently been put in circulation in this State Lc Mr..H. A. Street, of Harrisburg, has many v alnable and-interesting features, peculiar to it beig and the wants of tho people. We learn that the agents for this excellent work are haying ex cellent success, and we think that teachers. and others wishing honorable and useful employment,. would du well to address Mr. Street for terms and territory. See hisadvertiEement in another col umn. Govsnsoa GEARY has approved and signed the following acts of the Peneral Assembly of Pennsylvania: - An act declaring Wieonigen creek from Oakdale Forze. in Dauphin conntv. to the public road leading from Ctark•e Valley to Tremont, in Schuylkill county,. a public highway.. A sripplement to an act relative to the publication of local newg in the connties . of - Centre and Schuylkill, approved the sixteenth day'of April. &mu Dognini one thousand eigir. hundred and. sixty-gix: , . An act snpplementary to an act to incorporate the Cnion full Association of Pottsville. • • THE circulation of the Missies' JOURNAL is steadily increasing. If it keeps on at therate it has increased since the drat of the yetitr, we will print at the expiration of 1867 con siderably over FOUR THOUSAND papers each edition, rendering the Jcens.sr. the most extensively circulated paper in the State out (tale cities of Philadelphia and Pittsburg. Advertisers appreciate the advantage of hav ing their fhvors spread before twenty to thir ty thousand readers. Hence the continued and increasing pressure upon our advertising columns. • TII E Republican press of Copperhead coun ties complain that while • the local wants, of the Republicans of Republican counties of the State; are promptly attended to by the Legislature, the wants of the Republicans of Copperhead counties are neglected. They think that as hard work is expected at every .State election -at the hands of the.Repribli .eans of the Copperhead counties .to reduce the Copperhuld majorities, they are entitled to some consideration, at the hands of a Re publican legislature. There is.considerable ground for the complaint, and we trust that the constituents of Republican represeita 7 fives who neglect 'the just requests of :the Republicans of Copperhead counties, will mark and refuse to return them. Tim REGISTRY LAM. —We have received a copy of this law as introduced - in the'State Senate? It •is simple but effective, and if adopted will be a general law for the State. It will not require legal. voters who are, known to the officers to be such, to go and be registered, but it will require those not known to be such to , be registered ten days before an election', or they cannot' tote.— Election officers will be constituted hoard of registers, and they Will, meet filleatt dayt before an election' and sit dv . edayir to ogle- , ter voters. The law, is atripi end mit4t,: the views of every honest [Mind tglth . _PIN" who regards the purity of, the:l44l9omi so important • We hope that 'the Legislotaii -will promptly pass this bill, so that:lt tsay receive the signature of the flor - emir' and be come a law: We Might 'add' that tifidifi the provisions of of`ibe proposed ..eluMge. s ki94pted: lists of re g i atered•w4l li ; o 44. Bo #, rib 91 itttett e10.;494 Wot t " • . - THE BALL IN MOTION. V 411 Pursuant to eall, - n meeting of theeiti ,, zena of Pottsville, favoratle' to the im peachment of :pares ' - Johnson - , "acting President of the United States, ins held at the Union Hotel, on Monday evening, 11th instant. ' This, the first formal impeachment meeting we belietie of citizens heldin Lhis country, was large and enthusiastic. ' Capt. James W. Bowenpreaided, assist ed by Stephen Rodgeis; Win. VI, Bitnon Derr and Jacob B. (Moline as Vice-Pres - idents, and A. B. Coal= ;paid Wallace as Secretaries. Benjamin Batman, Rsq.,•addressed the meeting at length on the subject of Itn-. . peaChment, and -at the conclusion of lei remarks, offered the following resolitiins which were unanimously adopted • Vir, B ERFAs, Andrew Johnson, ecting President of the United States, has in sympathy with . Midi and traitors,inape dell the execution of - the civil rigida and other important laws 'risked -by Congress r failed- or- refused - to execute the new Reconstruction bill ; combined .with traitors to usurp the prerogatives of Con gress ; caused by his infamous policy the murder of more than five thousand . Amer ican citizens, guilty of _no crime bat love of country ; surrendered to the rebels millions or dollars worth of raitroact.prop erty forfeited for treason, and built.out of the National Treasury during the war; caused the loss of hundreds of- millions of dollars, and encouraged frauds by his removal ofgood men from and appointment of bad men to office ;, and because he has . disgraced , his official position by immoral habits, therefore by the `citizens of Schuyl kill County in mass meeting assembled, be it - - Resolved; - That as a; punishment for his many high crimes and misdemeanors, Andrew Janson should be impeached. : Resolved, That the removal of the Pres ident from the office he disgraces will in our belief, facilitate satisfactory Recon struction, for we have the united testi mony of 'Union men - at the South, - and of many from the North, who have visited that section, declaring that the great ob stacle up to this time, has been the polit ical action of the President conjoined with• that of his Copperhead allies of the North, Resolved, That the political relations of the country cannot become homogeneous and harmonious, nor its busineis interests be established , on a stable foundation, un til Andrew Johnson is removed and a statesman and loyal man put in his place. • Resolved, That as the Constitution makes Congress the sole and exclusive law-making body, of the national govern ment; as it makes it the bounden duty -of the President to execute all laws thus made; . as it gives him no power of dia.- crimination as to: what laws he will enforce and what he will not;, as it is everywhere notorious that be has utterly ignored the existence of the Civil Rights law and allowed it to become a dead',letter at the south ; and as he in the.same manner, ignores the Reconstruction act, we believe -that this furnishes alone sufficient ground for impeachment, and we call upon Con gress to prepare articles so that the Pres ident may be tried and removed. Resolved, That •it is a painful fact to recognize that the apathy of the mass of. our people and their representatives in reference to crimes committed by high of ficials has encouraged this terrible state of affairs, and that we fear that no effect , ive remedy can be applied until the people, as well as their representatives, awaken• to a sense of their stern duty in the mat ter of checking crime, and punishing the criminals, and thus cease to be accessories. Resolved, That Con g ress will be untrue to the best its highest duties; if it should fail to act decisively in that vitally important matter, the impeachment of Andrew Johnson. Resolved, That a copy of these pro ceedines be published, with a request that the. same be copied into the Republi can journals of- the country; and that copies also be presented to both branches of Congress, and to the" Judiciary Commit tee of the. House of Representatives.. .0n motion one of the Secretaries then' read Gen. Butler's powerful speech on Impeachment, recently delivered at Al,. Before the meeting - adjourned a large number of signatures were obtained to petitions,_ praying for the Impeachment of, Andrew Johnson. , THE Gr xaat. Ilawattcrr Law.—One of the Ails of the Congress which'closed on the Fourth of March,.was the passage of a general bankrupt law: This measur e . has been seta , e for several yang past. but has - Always . failed to secure sufficient support until this winter.. n became' law during the closing honor of Congress.. The nelv law is intended for the relief of honest debtors... Under its provisions, any person whose debts exceed the sum of three hundred dollars, may become. a voluntarily benkrupt. and be relieved from the claims of creditors by' the delivery for distribution of all his asserts. . The proceedings for the discharge of bankrupts by this laicare placed tinder the supervision of the United . States Circuit Courts, with a subordinate sp petvisory _ officer to be appointed ill each Congressional District to be appointed by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court to be called a Register. To the Register the . ,party desiring to avail himself of the relief of the bank - rapt law makes application, and by the creditors an as. signee is appointed Into whose hands the banixupt turns all his property for distribution. : The bankrupt on reserve to himself household and kitchen furniture and such other articles as he 'may choose, not exceeding in value five hundred dollars, also the wearing' apparel of himself and ftunily, and military. equipments If he bad any; and such other pro perty as may be exempted from attachment'and seizure under the laws of his State. • . It is one llistribotion of the assets of-the bankrupt is made in. the following - order veil costs of the proceedings In bankruptcy ; all debts due the United States ; all debts due the State: wagesdnelo any employee of the bank rupt far a period not exceeding six months immediate ly preceding The eommencement of proceedings In bankruptcy, and to au amount not exceeding $50,,000; . The balance to other creditors according to the amount of their claims, and without preference on accormtpf date or any other cause: • The bankrupt then receives from the Court a certift -cate of discharge and can commence the world anew in business relations without fear of old and unsatisfied judgments. No bankrept - can avail himself a second time of the provisions of the law, unless his assets will reach seventy per cent. of hisdebts. Alidcbtors whose claims have been credited by failure in a fiduciary ca pacity are. precluded from teller tinder this act. The law is only internied for the 'relief of honest. debtors. Hence, in order to avail himself otitis ben.. tits, the party must make a fair, full and lona fide de livery to the assignee for the benefit of his creditors, of all his efforts, otherwise he Is debarred frost the bene fit of the law,- and made liable to heavy , penalties be side. All fraudulent proceedings designed to defraud creditor% and all acts intended to prefer or secure one creditor ,at the 'expense of any, other, will not entitle debtors to the relief extended by the law; but. are posi tively forbidden. • . me law. is of course very lengthy, and embraces. many details, but the above are its lesdhig.provisions,' It will be well for the public to become - familiar with and remember them, for they closely concern every business man. The Central Pacific Railroad. This road was commenced in 1863, but 'opposition and other drawbacks hampered its progress greatly.— It is now finished, and the locomotive is now running ninetyqhree miles eastward from Sacramento to Claw station.' This is within twelve miles of the dreaded summit of the Sierras: The elevation above the sea of each of the principal stations on the route thns far are as follows Newcastle thirtpone miles from Pacoima. to, 930 feet - elevation ; Colfax, 62 miles,-4,448 feet; Dutch Flat, 67 miles, 8,475 feet ; Cisco, 93 mlles, 5,911 feet. 'The road le now graded (dose to the erreimit, which will he crossed at an elevation of 7,0150 lett.— By farthe moat difficult part of the road has now been built; that from the summit down the mountains east ward will bkacenFaritively easy, and the grade light= - In coming up, the highest 'allotted grade:llB'feet to the mile, is but once reached ; the average ascending grade to the summit is but 76 feet to the mile: in de• wending the eastward aide of the Sierra!, 90 feet be the greatest descending . gewle, and the average, cur ly 40 feet. When the eastern base of the Sierras Is pawed, there is almost a natural grade to , the westerly base of the Wockyliformtains. This part of the road can be built ten times more rapidly and about Rain& more cheaply than that already done. Ail the county, Stet and national monetary aid that was received has been throWn into the work ; and this terrible earnest nese that has characterized its manners was -whit si lenced opposition more then anything else, so that lie former wettest detractors are now Its warmest Mends. And it was no sentimental wish alone to sue the road completed that made its owners give to is so lavishly. They know well the great present trade and the yet compare tively undeveloped meources of the extremely rich country that is waiting for the development that the road will give ; and . they...know, - ,also. - that every' dollar expended upon it wilt Come beta with ir a rat Sn every near future after its tompletion, and th at .bare in ttsdr hands with the road bunt will be if .°2 two while itjs unfinlahed. - The mid will be complete to:Firgiela City, Nevada, 166 miles from Sacramento, in the latter part of len ; to Austin, 820 miles, by the fall of 1868 : to set lake City, 585 miles from Sacramento, in dannary„.l37o.-4. Y. World.' - . Tnz Annzeireraz Pzzerozarr We , Ills mew god if ; Utak were _possOki in.'llis came, still more infamous character. General Mies iTheilly Hsi .pirie,-sarohnionliedlfar Democrat, and the edi tor of the New ,York Citizen, has bow baring a talk with Andrew Johnson, and he 'Publishes Gill purport of it in his papoir of -Saturday hot. 'AD. cording to General tielpineddr.lehruzszlOinfes that.the couritry,le fast drifting Owls media- - him'. - Hi OW .I.)goei into &Wary itaborate ar gtunentto alum that peoplawill weary of paying, interest upon,tlyer dt)bte 0.11,5 t the a 013114 'ou twit& things willlcitist the' tlebtlo be ft' addby a oomfisratirely few persona; dud those fewill9l: acme will be Eastern capitalists i thiethe vdtleif, masses in Alta tkrutheire, Western,ttid'ilidita Stritessrill gradually become thisilottietarbOids hem bteden of interesuandiAakin a Mayes*, frail ili4ni4g l g:ithit PrkizalF9r.! 01 40=4 Pk* for these secnitkak,.andfiscart peuntsding thelli! pelves that: itio not rightle pays, h o op l a pith Caithe'dollaii jfitiwth=ilieak y l a„. - - _ta t11i1 . 4 elllgir li e; t l Zobkia vr ert * i :nti4 a k .fti l a i s rd iiOft eriat4ae cents realited up*. s trtmenlousfnetral intr‘thY wlll l dune fok* nl laltraUggtothee. owxrg lowimcp.).4 4 ll l :tartor Mt,' time maillit tO cob WO . ~ , . , . . nte.. MMMZ=. .P • - ElattkiloBB. " nt-The renrieh.population 'of fitAGOdele, tee: . - • SS - Alonzo 74.41 ingker of 13.blcilloi died on Thandai. - ; - • • /ErthrwoElizabettiiikes: Wirldr.l9a4le la the iWti-aecon4. President pre . • Pollock ie t forward .as cendidate for the . 41EirTne sum of B = l ooo in elver Wes sown from &Thames steamer, on the night. Of the 21:kli F. lieWoit. egedss. WU**, lianoa self to bed poet,.- in eineinnae,. for aorneetio G 6 3: reab o 4... 3 ZYß that ' a ft er hie return from - London, he anon take' up We Seidetwe Arne inadequacy of the two existing State Prisons has led to a project fora third to be bat 'at Harrisburg: • ' Jerome, of New York, hie bet Within a abort lad about . t 1,000,000 by the decline, of "NirAn • uharrumssafnl attempt was nude - near Milan; the other day, to assurdinte Victor Emir 'gram./ B01933 . 0;4)1 cenneetiont, has been appointed oo=rmoner Educatkru, under the remit ad of Congress,• &TA Fenianmeeting was held at Washington- On thellth; end' resolved to aid the rebellion in Ireland and askthe Hinted States for recognition. • tirAiihish-Ameriessr,..tarml run O'Connell, • hairbeen ids titled as being anicernettin the out break at Killarney, ruid"viss arrested at Cork. 16rOn Saturday last Hon. Samuel B. Ruggles Sailed for Europe to enter upon hisAnties as Uai. fed States Comminioner to the French : Espostr ,ilirt! Artemis .Wird" directid in his' will : that hia_property shall go, after the death of his mother, towards the erectigin of, in_ asylum for sfirlt Is rammed that Tote: G. Whittier, poet, is to be married in his old age, to a widow of Philadelphia, with whom he has been in love for 'thirty yssta /earn is reported thatileeretexi McCulloch will regiftnc about the first of: April, and establieh London, in. oonuection with Jsy . .oook, an_Ameri can Banking House, • _ : -SiirGeneral Gleam who M. now military di rector' of the 'Fenian Brotherhood, has given a contract for two tbousind uniforms to a, large clothing firm in New York; • - • • sarA terrible earthquake has taken place on the bland of Mitylene, m the Mediterranean. All the houses , on the island:are in rains; and hun dreds of lives have beFri lost. • . itirllnder the provlsions of the naval appropri stion bill, passed at the late 88101011 of Congress, at least ten thousand employees in the govern-. ment naVylyards will be discharged during the present year." • _. nirThe unanimous opinion ' of the London clubs is "that the recall of Mr. Motley from Vienna is disreputable to •Mr. Seward, dienaceful to the President, audit nfistortruid to the American peo ple." ' • Sir The Day* Wiseman tells of a man bale and vigorous with a rifle bullet still in his brain, received at the battle of Bull Bun. He was ill a hospital for. a year, but can now swiog an are or scythe with anybody. • Ifir George Peabody, Esq., 'has added another to his long list of splendid gifts for charitable, educational and scientific purposes, by bestowing one hundred and forty thousand dollars upon the county of Essex, Mass. • , _ • srlt is said that Queen Victoria's third eon; Prince Arthur. Winton Patrick Albert, is to be Viceroy of Canada, with the seat little salary of $50,000 per annum. The lad was born May let, 1850, and is not yet seventeen years old Mr-The Hon. Robert . C. Winthrop, of Bolton, in contributing $3OO to the Southern .Relief Fund, takes the occasion to writs : "I fear that our peo ple are not sufficiently alive to the danger of star vation which is impending over.many parts of the sa-A locomotive belonging to the Catawissa Railroad, exploded at Williamsport, on the Bth inst., injuring the fireman, a young man mimed Rook so seriously, that he died :roan after. ' The engineer was also injured, but it is thought he Xi - The Loyal League is, rapidly spreading its self throughout the Southern States. In Georgia there are - thirty thousand members enrolled, while Alabama contains nearly. one-third that number: There ie not a Southern State but'con taine hundreds of the League Lodges. ' " 0 - Leo Thidson'e horse l 'Sensation, " was chok ed to death in Patterson, N. J., last Wednesday night. He got hie bind feet over the rope tied across the rear of his stall, and then in attempt ing-to litidown,-the halter got under his 'neck and being unabled to raisalimself, honstrangled. Charles F. Browne, the - American humorist,, better known as Arttrous Ward, died on the 6th' inst., at Southampton, England. He was a, na tive o% Maine, a.printer by trade, and only thirty three years of age at the time of his death. His .first eglnsions appeared in the Cleveland Plain dealer, and at the time of hie decease he was en gaged as a contributor to the London Punch. Tnan are terrible floods at the West. The late flood in East Tennessee has, damaged property- to the value of $2,000,000. Over two hundred persons In Knoxville were, wash ed out -of their houses. The levee, near. Mound City, broke .on Wednesday morning last. At Cincinnati the - river is higher than it has been, at any time since 185 G, and at Louisville,-Ky.,- the water rose nine inches in fourteen hour Er. -It is now within four feet of the rise of 1847, and five feet of the rise of 1832. TEE PHILADELPHIA' POST OPTIC E.-113 . speaking of the need of a postmaster in Phil adelphia, the Daily News (a Johnson organ) of that city, says : 'Unfortunately for the government, as well as for the community, the person who was appointed to this re sponsible position some'mofiths since. immediately yielded ita conduct into, the hands of hocksterintpo7 litical tricksters, who tilled the establishment, in a measure, with incompetent and dishonest men. - We do not stop to inquire the motive of this strange con duct, either of the late postmaster, or the office-broker to whose hands he transferred the establishment; it Is enough for rts, to know thit some of the persons em ployed there bad but a short time previous concluded a term of service to which they had been sentenced in the county prison. • •'• . • . The people of this County having lost con siderable sums of money sent in letters through that post office, can from the above, know the reason why. THE COAL TRADE. PottaTine, 131( arch • 16, 1861. The quantity: sent by Railroad this week is 57, 606 Os tons , against 82,950 for the corres ponding week last year." At At many of the collieries the men refuse to work at the wages paid, and demand an ad vance on the present rates of wages. At sever al of the collieries, in the vicinity of &Wand, outrages have been committed and threat ening notices pnt up. The trade continues very dull, and it would be to Its advantage if a single ton of coal were not sent into the 'market, Until the flit of The Delaware and Raritan Canal will be open about the 20th inst. . The water has been let into the Schuylkill Canal, but no.coal has been shipped yet.— Not much Will be done before the. first of . The trade enure up this week- as follows, compared with last year I 62,950 34.093 18,524 6,824 6,819 1,218 1,251 556 439 661,6891 8242,1, 687 0111 1 1 60,69.1 74,310 1 69,576 " 8138 1 ' 4,7821 2,143 PaBBB. L Val It B. Scrant 13th. B'th Penn. C. C Shatnoldn Trevorton.. Short Mt... V. Co—. inthenattn Broad Tow I 212,076 A dealer who has traversed the blew Eng land States informs no that the supply of coal in marketlvill last until about the first of APr%-A and consequently they will not pur r , chase coal until this stock is , consumed. The, dealers in the principal , cities and towns ad= commodate :each other by supplying those who are out. And they also state that after they purchased lastspring and laid -In a Por. don of their stock, coal was forced Into the ,market _ at lower rates, and of course, they will , purchase,,only moderately early this Beason, ,order to protect themselves. Li New York the dealers in Schuylkill • Coal have- no Orden; and they don't expect any much before the flat of April, and, the awn mulation of coal , at the different shipping ports before there is ademand for it, only tenth to reduce prices lower. tlum they would . be - under other circfimstances. In thepres eat state pi' the (redo, if all the collieries were stopped for two or three weeks" longer, it would prove beneficial to the whole trade.- - 'On'ilte Lehigh but few collieries are at vrork, aid the are einal/ s • making Lehigh _ . , coal scarce in the market, and prima for their 6)81 has advausced a shade intonsetpaence.. . . .Inierriiternoi or oars CO AL Bans,--Thini • . seemsto, bepneh confusion and did:lenity . identifying the coal : hide in coal fteldi; owing to the various local names or misnomers by which they are now-distiti itdshed: •Ittimr.ltooh:vie have:ictopted:Die Oldeitnetnek : tehich have a ., common enrien=, vysmong onr.oldest *ere; and hive taken • the line of the Meant Carhqn and kill Creek ;till!** Is Ake lbeal# l es f4om whence ev e tiVe4tdontid • theni:"."Aii.theti-kieilities have the beet - development; and are the . oldest 1*•• ping-localitlei*riscof the Lehigh, thinh this pretireeet*Attec: --- ' • . " mete'comprehensive we. 4m adtOtixd a general-nomenclature,- which. has s more general • -4011eatlen;• . ,V ; ii-bitter, the coal ga legerlq eoi2noniinat 0 411 041• 61 'hidelS14-:. e4-hOjeett._''. The-Mam m oth . 'elwayi 4 ittkpenseinentlY; • the filth : bek thougl the: I:4k Ott twelfth bed , owlng:lo.:the beparati the `'.... - ifeftgkiiiiikthtil 'beds. • , 4ttently ezietkinfitlioTifiairiii;Ve4llll6* I Fhtle-lhet:lgfeesiothis otten:ibcnd diYlt] is o* , t4;l • • i&.• 1144100.*ille14 1 ; - . 4 04Vp'i - : . A.ooQoXJlC e tillitC * 9 ,r4 3- #M-41' 1 ** - -*' *4- 1461101thitftri,' EMMMIE • _ - , --m - . . reee,.neelle:9 ll ol{o B .th!!lh i ...t always ail* as a alingleited,-and-isenc,t-4E-mee *4141e pe sei, .enlier - veins 7 1'*c!i*i'.0_0940 1 * . all .eiterit4tetteee t - This bed NI - foetal:G., 1 11 7 1011Owill and Land` the Diamonds No. 1, indBo - No. VIPs. , 2 - and No. - -8), %Celt are • thißig Diamontrof Dttd!htiri the Little Dias:. mond and the Clinton, aometheei called the ”Coehle.." • • Then hfilu*lbe...TiseY.. fi le Ulla Tracy, with several icadcra, small, nn workable:bed seams, sometimes- davektp as worklide beds, and may then be knOW7I as Tracy NO. 1, 2 and 3: The P.each Mountainl , is then 34 while the overlying beds-raitY tie riamed, 0, P, ite., Our section- (figure 76, given on page 247 j gives all the beds In the Pottsffille District, with,tbC rtoliericialire - 4thipineipal ones whfie.fi,gure 215, on page 772, in the appeU-' dir, gives tho'prirmiptd seams with their to-_ ealmunes, near hrtheraville— - 2 • - • . _ • This bed is Identhull w ith the Gate, but the name le often mleapNied to one . of the Dimond% hence the e9anakm d r esztiekln this, ea 41134444er Knew. liAunEvr & liso.i have been 4. Pointed agents for the Silver (Lehigh) and Shenandoah Cify(ubiteasb) Coal.. This . Arco, which has.. its principal, office at hi 217, Walnut street, PhiladelPhis, composed gentlernen - af .long.qualencer.lit.the tnide, and who can be depended upon to funibill a . superior article of coal. We commend Stein to the amildeua&of the trade., . ' LOCIIST3101:121TAIN COAL.—Foi the sale-of this celehrated coal from the Locust Moun tain Colliery of the Mammoth Consolidated Coal Company, Mein% Borda, Keller &Nut/ Ong,' 327 Walnut street, Philadelphia, have been appoirkted sole agents. These gentle men are too well and favoralny known in the trade to need comtnendation from ns. We will only remark that the coal for which they are agents is strpaised by none in this Re- gion for quality and careful preparation for . ~Tex - ter - proposition, has been presented to, the Legislature to tax all coal mined and sold by the, minieg road lransport-,- ing 'companies ten cents , per ton.: This would affect the, mining. and transporting cempanies in the other region& It would not affect this Region. We are not. at pre sent prepared to etpress an opinion as to what will.be the effect of such a measure, Tea ' RICADING inn WILMINGTON RuLROAD. • —The Wilmington - Commereent in copying a' portion of an article on the Reading and Wil mington Riiiroad, comments in a manner which shows a want of editorial courtesy that is rather unbecoming the conductors of a respectable press;' but as they areyoungin the beefless, we will :overlook it. We id mit that we had not the act incorporating the_ road before us when we wrote the article, and as the route is not yet located by the en gineer, we presumed the route: indicated would be via. Downingtown ; but as Coates vile is not far from Downingtown, where it will-intersect the Pennsylvania Railrortd leading'through Downingtown to Philadel phia, that makes but difference. We are aware that the road alluded to will termi nate at Wilmington, and thht that will be , a shipping port, but as a road runs from Wil mington to New Cagle, and also down the Bay, we mentioned them as great - advantages to the route. -We highly appreciate the en terprise of ihe people of Wilmington in anti scribing so liberally to this route and insuring its comPleticin, but froth .our stand point we do not trouble ourselves with mere local questions. We wrote the article with a view of pointing out this favorable outlet from our Coal Region to the seaboard, by forming a connection with it at Reeding, to which point -we learn the managers "of the road will ex tend it, provided,we meet them at that point. Tna Plilkesbarre Record of the Times speaking of.the prospects of the : trade says: But one thing we feel, and that is the reckless and insane competition between the large coinpa nies. What the policy, which - underlies the beat ing down process between &Tinton, ,Carbondale and Pittston, is we do not ' understand. It - may be. an effort to keep down prices a year or two more ,- till all the coal is secured and monopolized and the few companies control the - Arines and the markets, and then purchasers, - look out, The way anthracite coal - is wasted is wicked, nothing . less, and another generation must_pay . for the ex travagance of the present. The Legislature of Pennsylvania will fail in its ditty if does not find some. remedy. for the evil suffered through the • grants of. enormous special privileges ; to these large corporatiOns. No small owner or operator has any chance at all, but is crushed to death, and swallowed whole by a great Boa Constrictor. -It almost makes one favor a-free railroad law, only that would not remedy :the: evil. unless old companies, and all old stockholders in old com panies are prohibited from making surveys and locating new roads nnder a heavy penalty,-unless good faith is shown by completing them within the shortest possible space of time:. • - • • • • The Owe is true. • And we think that the proposition introduced Into the Legislature to tax companies that mine :and-transport coal - is good. One good is certain to result from It. An increase of revenue to the State Treasury. - • CHAS.. J. & J. H. EANWICK NO. 121-WALNUT STREET, PHILIDA., WHITE and RED .ASH-COAL - Agents for the sale of the celebrated -BURNSIDE. Pr . = ilte Luke . riffle' dollery; Shamokin March. 18,%1 • • 11:1 . . . • .• Pier Na. 13. ~. - • x - ' . , . . - BOEDA KELLER & KIITTrNO,-. ,• 4. ' Wholeade Dealers in 'Peat Varieties of INTIIRACITE•& BITUMINOUS COAL. • .•••• • . _ • , . . • • -• 3 3%7 Walnat Street, Philadelphia, - OFFIGES : ' .42X Bilbyl3treet, Bnaton. . . . ' Boom 64 Trinity Bonding, N. York. - • ilr6ole' Agents for West Lehigh Green wood Coal and Coal -from the Cocain Mountain Colliery of the Mammoth 'Con solidated Coal Company. GEOBGB MIMIC BITUMINOUS on board at Balti mote or Georgetown. - March 16, '67 11- Dovn. • M. S.Boiniir. WM. Kannixtex. DOVEY BIILICLEY & C 0 :, .. JOMT . J.-DOVEY . SON & CO . , (J. J. rioyzi. =Jai; WSIALINDIIIOI4 . 7.I , . DOVE!) ibiers and Shippers oJ . the celebrated PRESTON ANR GIERERTON .• • _ - • - • COALI4B- •- • • • Wbas;lf No. 20; Port PHILADELPHIA—No. 226 Walnut St..Rooni NEW YORK—Trinity Building. 'Room No. 66 ; H. A. Aechterroleht, Agent. • • . • • BOSTON—Sower & Reed. Agents, NO. 29 Doane St. WASHINGTON, D. C.—IL Jones, Agent,. . • . . 'March 16, , . 499,111. 277,619 1 209,9 K .61,4'20 14,331 '04,844 57,606 '25,425 26,056 7,637 17,403 -5,719 1,224,153: • . .• . E • .7 1'11E - - - COAL, MARKTS: ••'+. rit tit. 640.. • [OOIIZIXED WZZELY4OII4OIICRIMUC • , AT: pfilLonsti i iiik. 'Ekhuyikikßed - Prenared, - 6'25015 50 " (Mesh:tut, 4 003 ' _ WhiteAsuLtunp /to Boat 4.50@:, 4 500 -Egg and Stove,' - 4 50e1, Chestnnt,.. , ~, 3 :75@..4,00 Loeust Mt. Lroup, Bt. Boat ' ' '4' 500 4115 ." .Brolted: 500 IS .", Preared. ' 4.50® ~' l ' 4 0001 ; • &Harris, Bt, Boat A. 8r0ken..... ' ,Pref a-ed ,417;i• • t . • '''' 13t: Boat 7 .!6 - ifra,4:: 6 0625 ft ,6 26 •:a‘ :•• • ' P 5 50!2 •a Chestnut,. - 4 750 t 'l3roadTon:._ ' 090 161 . 51 00. ceitikai -E Ds! ,Nbellswirs;:— `Lump;. Cargo 6k Boat indßioken • 4r :*" ' 505): =stove it et v @ •-- • - " 500 00 1 . . 19ciaasait Ciat as allisalbethgert. ' Lnn la 5'60 - 6250 6W Ohestiiat, 11- 5 - 096 1' - • • Ekewridiined . Ash i _ i yßoatis 6 ;Oliestunt. ' • ..- . White Ath 16 • '• • " -Stem Boat. sue;:"_.;.:::,. . - _, , Brolza. • • 6..M0D * ,• • ' • Egg_ ..• .. 6 11:1046 • Stmt.. .. .... .. .. 6 .1 .• • .... . . . 44#0.1kidtaAsh• . • •:St666lßot t f t. '• • ". '9 Bas' t 0..= " •••• • "ALT Iit . ip.TI4ITORIE. 3-- - sort&e . ere &liittivb 100 ' `'•:" • ..4041L. ikon 25 ttoceisvaLkszoblit;AAftl4sslWl - 36 oo - --01416201ThainarKliatrilMataLAND ^ - ' OiNga , '..llllErtir * ll3i '- ... - .. 1 , 4 1 1 2F i1t :j 451131163 !" 121 ' - At. ._.,._. ~apiefigthotogirs*).ll,,ottfriirpr ~r•-e.r., • 4 '' : (' -• ',.!-,•:. ' - - ( - - -. , •-titio -,i' .. • ' ' . ... . • • ';:, - -.1••.e: 5.2 15 0 4 . _ ~ , • -i—Lft-,......1 - ,.,, .- . ..-..: . "...-.:1,-,-4 4FM ~ ...tst,,r t'-rt . : l , r..",t':. - , "., ,. " - " it - VW" 111 0 01 M.••,.' 4 ,!•th.-:...% c''''`i ~ ,4 1 , 4 , 4.1-- 156111:3...,;,:-.....,:. . • '" '• ~,:,:n r'l l i Thiliknelit:: — ......;!. tt-A- ' ',. 44 4 1 4 , , ....7 , -.7.1, ,, t i ts .. 2=4i .,-..,.. . ~. . , ',•• .: ' - filr..ll. .„... ,_,.. „....,._ . 1 , :... .. 1 4, 1 ., / illi ... , :t!- 1, 7.": - :, ' , , ; 44...ti.).,..i1, 25 ••"••:!!" , "-,71 ', 7.• .. 4 " .. 40. - 4.11, ' - 1.1*,. - '-, 1 44itc,..4%,,, , 0., . . . '., . • . . GigaiXSS6Mie%n?ZisWwad..WMbtel Pier No. 19 440, fiUrt Itailamli.'... .1.. ........ -Claelnee; - • • - , j 0 80 _ Bi ngo e..- -,/ =-, . It U r Georgistenizt. ' - -160 T 8 60' Glemsenter'= - -, -- 80 . P s C su. a h silromtrile ; n ,; OL4. :. •. ... ..' ';'s'.--....1... 111 I 5 d 0 - a IC M OA t3 LI m s..d•.,4 .;;-.-.. L: 4:...f..- - ..,'.2 .55 ;...;....42 i i .,,. : ..`1 lo,s ;4.;.;i150 eetown, Xes ; : fitiO "Neyf1e010n.,:....;1 - 2 05 .- Wiltua. - . - ..,... . :.- SOO Noklmlk' '' '' ` -",-. . 215. .W. , .light . dratt. ite.;:. 5,10' NEW Bedfdrd. ;I'.-;: - ..12 35 - - ....' '9. 'and lofftes.,:.' -es iiiitort. .... ...5 15. no l . 1130eumaccia1 Point. . ISO Slate , - - . 2 . 10: p1i 3 05046**-...... , :. , •••••-•, Ne1einaM3...'....... . ..• 3 IS Salem - - • ' " - 1t .015 Newport. - • - ;-.,2 10 Medford - -'430. amedmeiriii:::K..l.6o. Marble Head -- --,- • Pawtucket. '. • 240. 'Bci;gbFV ; "" • .s"*'-'.!•.•" 11 4 ' i ` P l"ja i mee:- 1 .; --- - ...2 10_ Lynn .:::: ..... . 3 Itabmifrolist...... ... - 3 00 Mildew '"- '''• :.: - .:.- 4 : 60 - A1"*". 1 . 4 * .. ..: 160 . A n my .- • 1.80 Eki63106/1.. ... ... ...... 200 13 = a. " ' 1 /i , 00 .' 5 1 M 7 0 0 .3 0 1 —2 2 g Charlestown • 2 30 , Wathin,gton•to,C d4 ........ 166 mohoklgeport.... ... ... 3 131 Weymouth • 2 00 Cohassettliarrows:: 2pa lidmmir..: - • . - .1. 50 • Dorelmsterf r alat..., 3 00 Neladdll - ' -' i . 00 D i ghtm - 200 Iradnouth. .. ....,..... .;2 15 Danversport ~.- ; , I 00 , ICoonebrook Point... 2_lo Sot Greenwich -, ' 1-10 - West Chester 1 a • Fall _ _ ...Ether.. :4—.4 210 Ipswich . . sOO F1611011C6010X0i.:...Z.,:/,75 blended . 1 65 New Y0rk .:.......: 1 00 1 Na pith ' " ... 252 Lek ftla 4k nabs/air, Coal Trade for 1867. Wea ending with bid Setlirda=' ' " -• Mown &m:.. , .. . afidootoy • Delano. Colliery,'» _ - Gleculni2 Coal • - goznpani • • .ittithbtm, Ettearas &Co • McNeal lroleitertotifer Cog Compa7.:-. - Montag Coal .. .. ... .. Cod 71ozolteln ' .Other Sbippere _ Total. CorreVoraillig Week 'set year... necresse.:- • • Vioegroie.Coul Trade for 1567. • • Aliment transperted dazing the last month •:- . - • . 1Cireek....i.......'. . . 15,850 la . •. • 3.130"15 Goodc .. pr . ng 2,219. 07- 4,55012 -Onion: Mat Railroad :..:. ."..13,5M 0•I - _ 13AT of • /lecioylk ill .•Cow. Railroads, for 186*. -The following , iI3 the quantity, of coal transported over the teaming Itailttiade for the week ending on Thurs. day evenhig_last sane Bill S. U. R. 8.'.. Schuylkill Valley Mt. Carbon . - . Mill Creek.- ...... „,. Mahanoy &13road Mt „ Little Schuylkill -- • BLACK BAND IRON ORE.. Bent over the,_Mill Creek Rail Road for the week ending on Faturdsi last Week . .. Prevlowly. Cilia' Trade by, Beibraid, for 1567. St, Clair Port, Carbon Pottsville. Schuylkill Haven Auburn - Port Clinton Total for week Previously !hisyear • Total' • To same time last year... J Decrease .Schuylkiti Navigation Coal Trade. For the Week ending Thursday ; Mardi 14, ISCL Port Carbon Schuylkill Thiven. • • • Total To same time last year.: • Lehigh Coal Trade for 1867 For week ending on Saturday OPERATORS Hazleton • East Sugar Loot ..... Mt. Pleasant. Jeddo Harleigb. . Ooze Bro & Co. ....... Ebbervale Coal Co Stout. - Council Ridge Back Mountain . .. . New York. & Lehigh. :... Honey Brook Coal C.... German Pa. Coal Co. Spring Mt. • Coal Co Coleraine 'Beaver Meadow John Connery Lehigh Zinc Co J. B. Reber & Co.. McNeal— ... Knickerbocker C 4 l C.... . Coal Run Coal.Co Rathbun Cal dwell Co Glendon oy ..... Mahan ' Delano C,oal Co .. H. Meyers. ' 011iman Baltimore Coal Co Franklin Andenried Lehigh & Simi, Co - ..... . . . Wilkeebarre • Warrior Run Parrish & Thomas Leh. Coal & Nay C 0.... Packer, Skeen & Co Other Shippers.. Mt. 'Etna - North Mahanoy Walter Bros. & Co N. Jersey Coal Co John Lantrach & Co :Trenton Coal C 0........ Union Coal Co Wyoming Coal Co Total ..-. .. . . llama time lastvar. NEW ADVERT'MENTS. I" Fn . itlexison.- : Garden Implements' Spades. EakeS. Hoes, Garden Trowels,—TranstlanterO, Pruning 'Shean3, Halve& Saws and Scissors at • . ' "March LEWIS C. THOMPSON & CO.'S "Glows, • Caltivntoiii,. Castings, Hay and" . Manure Pork's and Transplanting Forks at March LEWIS C. THOMPSON S: CO.'S • Hay. and dizaw - Caner.,.l.f you want a goal. Cutter, buy. , one •of ours.' They will cat,hay;.- Mraw and corn stalks,. and a boy can work them with, perfect ease—light, weighing . .but-.50 .pounds, strong anddurable..aud not liable toget oat of order. ' War ranted to be the best Cutter in the market. At • • March 16,:-11-• • LEWIS C. THOINIPSON & CO.'S. racker Breaker, .. a very. excellent . article for N.. / use In oyster saloons and restauraota• Also, anew lemon squeezer, both mule ofgalvanii , d iron.; will not rut.. Jut out, at LSWIS C. THOMPSOI,.t' ~,•CO'S. • . March 16, •• • • ' •'flatent Iron Holtier, with nietalle stripe on the 1. inside to keep It from getting hot or burning.. A .very •ust.el article, and comes cheap. Every.tamily. shotdd have one. 'At • • • • • March IC; 11. LEWIS C. THOMPSON . . rrlable Illitts.--Jast received a fine assortment or . Table Mats, of Ta number of , new and desirable patterns. Also a good assortment of Knife Baskets, with 'several divisions in them. r ' • • •i LEWIS C. THOMPSON & CO. 10 000 Feet of Tarn Arotin- Drain ripe of all from 2' to hi MO.—. Also Lanches, Bends, e and Elbows Chimney Tope of all sizes at P L. C. 'THOMPSON & CO.'S.. March 16. 'fa ' 11- • 111113•UNDERSIMIED. - . . • L • HOMEOPATHIC PIIIIII3ICIA NM, • Would respectfully -inform their friends and the public • of Pottsville and -vicinity, that they have- located:per manently, and opened' n office " at.tbe corner-cif Market and Second etrects,.Pottinrille, Pa., where they can be_ professionally consulted. •,• OvitozEOURR:-27.t0 10, A. M Ito 2,•P. M.: 4to 9: . P .M. - • • 11.. BECKER, M. March 10, .G7-11-oml . C. B. DUSKIER, M. Di; CIOODRICHIS' EARLY ;SEEDLING A..* POTATO.. . • This Potato la now 'cortaidercd one of the earliest and beet Potato planted, and the yield is very large.—. We would advise oar • Farmers 'and Truck Gardeners A supply of the genuine article jest-received and for s.sle at $1 25 a peck. $2'.25 half bushel and $4.1:10 a bushel, or $lO 00 a barrel: at Pottsville, at • • B. BANNAN'S Seed Store. . Akio Gamut Chills; Ras ty Coats, and Conoi,.. or Early Mercers.- All of Goodrich's Seedling Potatoes at $1 2.5 a barbel. - . • ' .. • ' . , • TAmue Noun. C11011013,--We. will send a $55 Sewing Machine; either Wheeler & Wilson or Grover &, Baker, to any person sending us the names" of eighteen new subscribers to the , NEW - irORK.' OBSERVER, ' With the money, ($63) for one year in advance. We have sent away as premiums more than .. • • . . • of these Machines, and they give universal satisfaction Sample copies and circulars sent free. - - Terms }3 30 a year in advance.* -SYDNEYR, MORSE. _A. CO., March 10-11-2 t eovr - 37 Park Row, riRPHANIE- COURT SALE.—Pursoapt to A.! an ceder of the Orphans , Court of the County of. Schuylkill. in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; the subscriber, trustee of Joseph Ferrebee, late of the; bor ough of St. Chtlr. in the County of Schn , Brill, deceased, will expose to sale by public veadue, on . • llaturdity. she 6th day of .Apeif,'lB67;'. Atlo &Clock.% the ;forenoon, at the premises[ All that certain farm or tract- of land, situate in the town ship of Wayne, in the County of - Schuylkill aforesaid, bounded by lands 'of Joseph . William Rein, Jon athan Kerahher, 'Jonathan Keminerling. Daniel Schaefer; l'hUlp Hammel and others, cantabthig 340 acres and 4d perched, - with the appartenances,-consist lag of a two-story frame house, swiss barn, hay barn, ete..; late the estate of said deceased. Terms and , con dltions made known at the. time and place of safety • • - aossaurzffiGEß, Trustee:—; By order of the Orphans' Court. Csauxxs Moan, Clerk Pottsville. 'March 16th.186T. 1 .11TTEn6'-'2l,einninlng Unclaimed. .ILa the Post . Office, at Pottsville, State of - .PermaYlilli:' rite,' on the 15th day:of March, 1267. ' • To obtain any of these letters, the applicant Mad call IL" advertised Wow,* irtie the date of thhillari and Vett one cent foradvathft. ' • • It not called•for within ate Meath theywill • e`sen t. 1 .to the Dead Letter °dim Mama Nancy GereJas M • *Oldeally refer J.. -Bowler .W •Gairmehael Crßanike'Pat ah Cordon -,i•G Geattuthin Jan: , Phillips Thos, Crowther Rich ahHoben „Brhigot ' Quinn JosephDevine Matthew daney.Satah oinn John Dram Bernard Klein ER rm"...' Deiine Bernard ~ Lfttle Wm. - Hannan IP- - Dowltan OattueineLloyd Jane Riley M - Egan Wm - Magi:ones RdwardSmith Wi ll Hgan Tha • Mansin John . . -St Jam Mary Berton NH 2 May. W-P Wister „Toms ISvlon David . Morria nos ah. Wellington Wm., K.lBoYer'•• 'McGee: Tim I &Walker Win; Jr • Fo ll eltY Mary Mellor SilloMe • Ma ra , 1006/ • ' • M. sminamt. PAt.: . .., ImeditTAVr.: silit ItorsEKEErEk B i. _..... • S OLO MON ••• HOOVER. - ? ;Centre ac; a .ikkara: arrive ilarketrtikesi - slde; POWlreFirlll6 LE, - ' 4. 1 I tialiecutiny announces to the public that he bas_now. on hand the and best assortment, of household farnislffnitAtAser pgr e pedin thts rmion, Whet Ni l is selling at greatly rediteed*PriceS. ' Those wiShiest. 'Pods lia his /toe -would do. wen to call and see his ' stud:beano purchasing elsewhere. Hs " feels doitili dent thola lt aggov. be ..ingsi k amad. In cheapness i 194" s,o_aillili_. - 'nig' stock ••''.:akdliSils , i'ol Kitchen' ._ ~,,,! manm. Mate* Cooking. Parini and Hall , , Staves of all kinds ' and sires. Tin. rirdioe" Ziolle*BlV iiilass, Jeri% N tuud A~nna . : Wares,.` • itniatios; , ~ mesas ,ibr -tie 'Mout, ' tree MU and • Pods. ::,Stench ware.; - Water Coolers,; The Wet— .. • L Print Jars, .ThiskeU ttsim aadel Waoseak ' iSsitds, ;Mills; CoaT: • Tea Sale, Coal . 011:-.1anaps,-Hariging Side arid , Lame. Idgrsjod ninr,spfe articles', too tur ' --:2lstßoiStwating.` - and all • kinds of - job twit , eavitdUAiere Skives rewired; and rOpitte 4 % * rdrori'Sa " lir iW in .. ritTur i rloollbe nie % hat sads.:, ', '' ,' ' •in bear , ' .4 7 ' (sited the •;' , Noscse bends, no fated sir, -,, VatilljesiriewW.liiiizio.-:, . ei ; gi. l inks, 1 ibeels.: , kfrlligepatutoat dry- WiTs..4 Wag( In thew* and never gets ;plantOrder; _•'.. dpger sowed known,. -so . . . ...-. 7N: 11 -.iir ... '..; !' • • - 1 1 1V ,-, *- - :: :;-, '-' 7' :I qL1; Pnoktl '''',"4" 3;1015181*4114v - Urt. S 4 1 1 • • 26.3 :SenAltiiigreo, above inre;ya,m&E*4 . - on large P-f 1- • g corr;:mormaivrrn4 Gs, pituG•o, I:7 , 2ICLTELIUMS. WINDOW SHAPES: at, „et WOOIXN and outeurra TABLE 'GOV^. Ate , . elllepte . let selling storm reduced pet- tr ,. . w tea. . •• ', ••• - - . 7:- • . March 16,..6T r. -WAith,Powder-i • -1;lx;r; PASTIXEI arteIMOMICK. A t nozwarAt. Sald every;- %taxa.. Tq , it Alldtesa all order to tbex im a ge t za , era, • ZIEG1413111:-Ar 51QITH• CHS7QST WHOLSLa..LIL v 37 Northlrligardl *l.; Plipiallelphipt; • Muth le. t' • • 64 46-IYI . 11- •-• GOOD NEWS FOIL MOTHERti I Mother, ire yoh el:pssed foireti little Ones . Are your eintebers and heats •oken their cries?;', Do you awake ih",the motninghare. reeehed -tuid appre .., sive ? ed. Teemed at once bottleof Dr. Lecces LAM Itemedy,st4 you will hare no mero weary hours of . wetchieg . alui Anxiety. • . . . - • DR. LEO'S INTANT,RI3IIIDT- • baa stoodthe test of Veers. .Thrum ids of -nurses and. mothers be witness that. it never iltdhl to give relief' it usedin season: It is a mild. yet sure and speedy.~ cure for Colic, Cramps and Windy .Pains and Is sable for all complaints'itutient Teel:Map: , • 'Sold by Drutiaisis throughout , ttie United Statas.— Addresaall orders to . • • ZIEGLEIFI. dc SMNITINE, .; • . SOLE PROPRIETORS. • 137 ?forth Third Street. Philadetplaia. Marsh .11, .6T • ('d646-Iy] -' 11- 1,,400 301 1,030 93C 2,430 1,314 3.51 330 14,22; 2 413 2,354 2 2. ST 10,995 11.010 3410 2,446 628 - . 111 " 1)1415-4 aT 8 • 628 New Spring &pier. • CrarOwn Make? . embracing every new and desirable alze. style and' shape of Plain and Trail Hoop Skirts, —2. 23 3X „ 4H,. 3,314.3 X, 33 , and •il.yrirda round. every length and size Waist: in every respect PreseQuaran, and ape daily adapted to meet the 'wants of First Class and. mcat•Pashinnable Trade. • . • • • -.Ora Own Masa" of Hoop Skirts are lighter, more' elastic, more durable .and naac.Lr 0111[APIS than any. othermake o[either Single or Doable Spring Skirt; in the Americaultarket. They are Muzak:smut in every respect, and wherever introduced give universal sails:, faction. - They are now being - extensively sold; byre tatters,andevery'Lady Should try them. Ask .for "Hopkins' Own Make...and see that each Skirt is stem - cd HOPKINS. MANURAC tU-. RER, fr-. 8 ARCH Street, PHILAIVA...- "No nreasegie . Gratimva. A catalog - cc containing; stye, size and're tail prices, sent to any.addre-es. A uniform and liberal discount alb:tiled to dealers.' Orders by mail or other -wise; promptly and carefully Illterl=wholesale and re tail. at Manufactory and Sales-rooma, No. , 1113• ARCM STREET.PIIILADA. SKIRTS made t o o r der, Altered and repaired. TERMS, NET CASH. ONE PRICE ONLY.. • . . WM. T . .- HOPKINS. ... kitsch 16, Id. . . :II Sat . eI . .4II.PILTIIIifG: • "*. • • •• • wtzli. .'MYAL 511,812 13 . . - 136;303 '0! 12,199 04 36,11-2 19' 992 06 3,332 06 ~ 6.362 15 39.201 11' - • 37,693 04 &GUSH BRUSSELS AITrirTAPtSTRIES, Just arrived frinn Europe and now to Store. Also, 'a ' . complete assortment. of . . L Boys; • `` " . " Bilisiels'amitilTapeenrielO t 3:PLYS AND INGRAINS. FLOOR OIL pwris,lziall'wthOis apdqballtles. ,- -VENE*Ni Tor 11:t11s . ROOS; - .RA: TS, ac., 19,381 11 43,33 b 17 192 1.6 L'0,512 00 C°l4 10,612 10 bi,COG OS 411,010"15 1.,E..ED0N1 &SHAW, 910 ARCH ISTIREET, Between 9th and 10th Streets, March 16''61-11.8mit PHILADELPHIA. - 449,117 03 .. G 51.324 02 152,T0G 19 NO MORE BALD HEADS! NO MORE- GRAY" LOCKS! DR. - LEONS' . ELECTRIC, HAIR RENEWER,' Is pronnanced by all who stave used it the very best preparation for the . Hair. It is a positive cure for Baldness, eradicates Dandruff ..and' Humors: stops. Mg: , Hair from-falling ont,nnd speedily restores Gray T to their original hne and luxuriance. - • • It operates on the secretions and fills the glands with now life and coloring matter.. Thin, dead, faded or gray hair will always be brougt back by, a few ap phcations, to its youthful abundance, vitality . and RAILROAD it makes the Maisie, glossy, fragrant, pleri.sant to the touch and easy to arrange, Dry,. wiry and intract able locks become mole, pliant and dispoaed to remain in any desired position. As a Hair Dressing it has no equal. • - The sales are enormous and it is a universal favorite with old and young of both sexes. • Sold by Druggists throughout, the 'United States.— Address all orders to :L • ZIEGLER MINITEL • SOLE PROPRIETORS. • . . .137 North - Third Ns:, Philadelphitt.. March.lp., . - [.66, 46-13 , 1 •-• . 'll. 8,006 14,098 1'4280 as 744 pENNSILVANIA CENTRAL it. A. . Spring Airangements. • ISM'. This ComPany . haa recently placed on sale at Potts., jibe, a large stock of throne/ "tickets to all principal Western points, including CHICAGO, • • LOUISVILLE, • . • CINCINNATI, " MOBILE,.' C)LUMBIA, MEMPHIS, .; CAIRO, NEBRASKA CITY, . • CLEVELAND, - • NEW ORLEANS, • lOWA CITY, • OMAHA, • ' INDIANAPOLIS, QUINCY, • • "KANSAS CITY,. , • ROCK ISLAND, .• • LEAVEN WORTH, - ST. LOUIS, And all principal points West, Northwest and South= west. .• • -. • . Baggage checked, to Pittsburgh. . . Before reaching that point' an Agt of the Company will pass through the cars rechecking baggage to d.eqinatien.' . " Only one change of cars from Pottsville to Pittsburgh. paasengers leaving Pottsville A.t . .2..45, P. M. arrive at Harrisburg 3.30, P. Id., and Pittsburgh at 1.30 P. M. Leasing Pottsville at 3.4.5. A. M., arrive at Harris-, burg 1.00; P.M., and Pittsburgh at 1.30, A. M. • • .At Pittsburgh close connections are made in the new Union Depot with the train for all western points. • For further infarmation apply to ' • E. It."11 - 11L'ELER, ' .Ticket Agent,Philadelptila and Reading R. R. March la, 'PI . . • - 22,112 14,769 4,029 1,664 4,346 5,267 22,592 2,247 11,716 7 . 50 1 1,74 152 614 13.22, J. 1112 333 1,07 S GOVERNMENT PROPERTYAT PRIVATE SALE . OPIININs.OO _ s 5,000 New and Second-Hand TEA.M.HAItNESS. 10,000 BRIDLES and COLLARS.' . 8,000 SADDLES. all Styles-2X to $9 'OO. 300 Foutllorie.Government WAGONS. : ' 3,600 WAGON COVERS_ , all sizes, new and worn 5.00) BLANKETS and HORSE COVERS. - , Alio, a large 'stock 'of Reins, Lead' Linea, Whips, Buggy. and Ambulance Hamm.' Portable . Forger, Chains;'Swingletrees, Lead Bars, • etc., ~etc. , Wheel Tettiallarness,little worn-411 Oak tanned Leather -and serviceable, cleaned and oiled: $ 5 00 Per horse or mule, including, bridle' . :' Lead do, $4 00: . Wagon Bridles,- $1 00, Collars, 1 . to $2., Extra Hair lined Ar-- y Case do., 23 ; and $3 00 ,.. Double Bel a& 113 to. 22.25. Lead Linvs, $l. Halter&"6 to $l3 per dozen. Officers' Netv Saddles, $lB, with Plated - Bit Bridle, $2l; geodes new, $l2, with bridle . , - sl4; ' Valise Saddled for boys, $6. Wagon • covers,. made to tit any wagon,— heavy linen,. 8 to $6; superior -cotton duck, 6 to $B.- 12 oz duck, 9to $l2. 1.000- Hospital Tents, new and good as new, 12 oz. duck-14 feet squiire-30 to $ Officers'A... Tent; -7 fret - Equate.; - from sto 82. 10.000. BAGS, from 12 oz., Duck .Ist.. quality. 2-bushels. $9; 245 bush..'slo: 3 briatt:sll per doz.: . 2d quality, . $7 30 $S 50 and $9 . 50. • . . SMALL ORDERS SENT by liird'RESS, 0. 0: D. • I' .T 'Sr. Ate- .1C 0 , • . No: 33T and 339 North Front St." .. ,Thiludelidda,. Pa,: / 1.0 . 11 Park Place, New Tor . k. - • • • No. 433, Street , Washington,:D. C. Price list sent on appllcatiOn. • . . 'March la-11-6t THE•CENT.RAL PACIFIC RATTIROAD COT Having completed, equipped, and' ptit• in ()picot ion ,nenrly one'imndred milea of their road,"from fi'era mento, California, .to with i n 12. miles of the summit of the Sierra 'Nevada Mountains, continue to offer for sale through ns, their '." • , • FIRST- MORTGAGE BONDS , -.• Issued in conformity with the Acta of Congress - and the lawa of the State of California, npon the division of their road.located in, the State. of California, and ex -tending one. hnndred and &Om' Sacra., mento City to the California State Brie. , The Bonds btriOthtrty years to run from Julyl, latla, an l'are.tieciir - ed by a' ' " constituting an absolute prior:lien on the portion or Road above named, with all the Rights, Franchises, Equipmente:ito., pertaining thereto. .• ' • The amount olthese yortgage Bonds to be is sued per mile is limited by lhw to the amount of I:Tal 7 , ted States Bonds allowed and issued to aid the eon atrnetinn of the Road, and the Mortgage by.citichthey are 'veered is:Peclared by Act'of Congrestrio Constitnie a Lieu Prior and Elfiperior dint of the United Einiteadevernment.' Inteiest at Via rate of Six per cent, per annnin;pay. able eemt-annnally, on the filar days of "January and , . Principal and interegir pay Ole in United States. Gold Cobs, in the City Of New York; .. • ' . ~ . . The price of the Bonds is fixed for the present at 95 'percent;; Mid accrued interest from Jaututry' currency; the company reserving` the right, to.adiance the price tiheiever it is ttieir . interest to dole°. ' - • The Road forms the:Weetempa4 of the • • • MAIN-TRUNK- Great National Pacific "Railroad - Atithorized;afttWand aided 'by The 'United States Government. heart' of tilt& It runs thron e o , e t and most populous eeetion, of the State_ of . ,.9Wornia. connoting Extensive Mining Itegioris of Ng4 vadat, ITtalt Idaircoi;t with Secramen. - n slid the *ma - Coast..**Whence 'theft anOpliellemust be drain; andibe wafted Mel icortiOn already running are verYltertriOind, Hugely mess of the interest upon the Cdtriptitire Bonda Itaving_been AW'somethneltertiltar the opera.,, dons of the Central - Pac ific iiatio - xtd Company, we are. usdidiedtliae-they are 'conducted-with rateability, ind : preened:mid tlitit the' eismet4c arid sconotelcal named of the Corepenyis alleles entitles than tO the 'confidence end of . the outdid; We*itt . 'esieftdlititiesttgated the rrogresa-reitarces and pretti pects - of ttutzlit): andhare the tallest ondtdonice in its success, and tn'the'value and staiiiiity Of theCiesptuira ifteitterillen - of tirelessof estate% Wank. Elena arid iiiiivtdaaficdesirinea lonk, safe and ream:: iterative, inveatment,la especially invited to . Oldie ; MIT!' lOgage Boids• • ' ' . .• 6140:r*Sis-OrMOO tons .dir-.ll*.g*o l 0 6 : iiiliciiii Baigcoiivt,Bae4dif id. an. isiig4 the onii. may' be iliac in drafts on New York, or in Legal Tender Mites, Natbiid Baniclitites, of other , rands cru;ntat firltds city, and the Bonds wile be tor _warika 1• 0 ./1 16 / 1 03 s PY free ot - 1°- 0140 farth er partisaliqs, py toad or otherwise, , 11 7 11 .r# " ' . -Pls - ii sk; HATCH Lmoteil* ii9crrengneo Ektrities, - „*Clirlui:goAir s*- 1 9 E 1 1rl'. 1 t.' ' 'illt:24llklnds'of Gareintaent Seetogliiii#4lied are 1 4 -2- 44:0.0 - 0 11 : eX A O O I . 11 : 8 , gil " )30*^„1 , 4010,:.,i. '• ;i•-at if- ~ • it 4,......•/,. K. ; , '' 11 #44 1'4 *404 1 * 0144 / /ei 1 05 4 #*kiit 7 iiiit,alt.twitandotedßoasht i llorilasit g ed : :40 - 43kazolassuir.ELdiaioxii.bil'iiitiOsOld FA Wit**ifif §t4t*f. , o :. #lkilSi . ,SO _Jeckatiot,t,: - r.„ rArzo new r: f ir , 444.7544406041.,—. SOg pl9t4otelegint patterns 01 FIRST MORTGA.Gt, 43:6 7 -..',:-....'' !„.?'.-,_'. ''.'• ';''......--,.„:. Le.i.4l4:olre•lVVE4.o,34tX; :". iiitok:*lllokitikONl:Ai..lll.,, The well bum Poestidfe!Wear and - Prvietor of the 2iMittiiTA3lol4minituttiactorr. "THE;WORLD OF msolc.” : 400 90EITLYAND'1313.E1111,_ cauF - AWAi EA= ItKA B 'Call 8 Jlle W *Jr. 1,!•• - 1/5 FAIRLY TICKETS {Admititin e t x } 01 00 Ikea oven at. T otiock. . anitanentitig at 8 o'clock. ; Mira S. •Ar. 1041 t. FOR ii,t% t lX AND To LET. - Eton show Oise, and gbehing. stjtablia pc . 4 store . Call and extmlna Inquire of - .BJfNRY \111 . 7331ick, Centre steeet. - Alin* . . OBlllllll4l'. —The ' oreSt lima now open_VS Hal l : by *4 • Thomas -Ptailk, Toaia tatlftg,oenue.Street.',:l4o,o). Itatate 'Lk 44- 4 -11-3i* SLATER: : OX' SA.lbtre good will. Stocieszut Fixtures .of a•First.Claiss"-LIQUOR _STOW together With Horses, harness,. Wagons; /Stel'. ac.. au, all tour .lfor pariitorlus sorof to • _ • JOlllit.. - EfEfiNESST. Moth 16.AFT-11-3t, • Terrace. l'otissille. .Kto.ll 1141,1412.....4 good: eeixtrul-hanti Plato. : Counter. Shelving and.Ghtsidare. 'ApO'y to • V. B. liOßfl SON. Market St., Pottsville. 'March 'lO. . . 1.1,2 t• FOR MALE ... . two story Wan, to good repair coat 3121 w tour rooms. slanted in Norwell . gian Arent near 'Fourth, will be sold ebeap-by applying 'soon to -GEORGE • W. SLIME, at TOwn /411. Oentrestreet, Mara 1e..61 Van RENT OR HALE.—A um - Remelt .Room and. Damning on Centre street, Ash land, Pa. For particulars - apply to • CILKNWRIGHT, ihabiand. Pa. - 14reliUt. '66 . . • - 'MU . VOR SAL 6. 7 -An fight room hOuse, with bath IL - and Callowhill street, eccond door beton , Third street, east aide: Inquire on the . premisce. Al so. furniture for.sale. • Match 9. VT 10-lt• FOR SAl.;B.—k large `BLACK HAWK" MARS,6 years old, sound and. altright, good driver, double or single. She is very tumdsome.- • - ' • JOSEPH 11UNT211311, Pottstown,- Pa. . March 9. IST , • . • •14).-te - • • • • 'WININGIIIACIIINERIC FOR RA.1.13. One steam engine, lio horse power, 18 inch bore, 6 ' foot stroke, and 20 foot fly-wheel, in good order. • One pole pump, 14 Inch.? foot stroke, - • . One Ventilating Pan, 9 foot diameter.. One Ventilating Pan, 4 foot diameter. - At the Machinery Depot. JAB= SPARKS. March 9,'6r • ' - 10-Y "VOll • 14.4. LE.—The New York rind Schuylkill Coal Company offer for sale several hoisting and breaker engines, -with appurtenances . -Also,- two pumping 'Amines at Heckscherville: colliery. For par. Scalars address or applyto . • • W DAWSON, Woodside, ' March 4.'67 -10 at . Schuylkill Co, Pa. OR BERT.-The room above Hamlet% green U grocery store, lately occupied by Rev. Samuel Miller. - Apply to .RD. RAMBLER, &q. . t • Corner Centre and Norwegian Streets. March 2, VT, • • 9-3 t 'ARNE FOR SALE.—A. Farm on the Schuyi kill and Susquehanna Railroad, five miles east of Pinegrove, for male, including . Cock, Implements, grain, hay. &c.—about 200 acres, half .under cultiva tion,lies favorable. Price low, and terms easy. • -Address "FARM:. Miners' Journal Office. March 2, '6T - . 2-tt - OR SAL E.—The undersigned offers for sale one F double two-story dwelling. with room In front to build two houses, adjoining lots of Mr. Miller and Mrs.: Nagle In Market St.: For par ticulars, enquire on the premises. THOS. MAGUIRE. Mardi 2, VT 9-tf EMIR RENT.—.An of corner of Centre 1: and .Idarket street?: also, one .on - Market street, four doors from Centre. Both light and convenient. Apply to LEWIS C. TIIO2qSON & CO. Feb. 23, .81 . -8- VOR SA L 16.•:—Thb Brick Church on' Mai,±l . 1 ket street. Passeseiontiven April 1at,1861. For terms, apply to Feb. 23, 'GI tt, LEWIS C. THOMPSON Ac CO. FOR BALE - S 2 Schuylkill Canal. Boats, Tally equipped, and la good order in every reaped. A low price will be token for them—CASH, • Address LEWIS W. PHILLIPS, Sox 1250, New. bry. P. O. " Feb. 23„ 13-tr Fp° Odlco now occupied by Harris •••• Bros. in Russsls' OifiCo Building, 2d floor. Pos- Benton given April Ist. Apply to • • HENRY C. RIISSIII,, Maud Mahantongo Ste._ Feb 23, %I 8 tf CZ TS 421 OILIIPS, ready " for nee.--12 inch 1.3 steam cylinder, pole 6 inch diameter • and 2 feet Two 25-horee Engines. ' One 60. horse Engine. " • POMEOY & SON, Pottsville Iron Workg. Feb. 16,, , 67 . • • Ttf Vlllift SALE...A valuable Coal Yard property, in 5: the city of New York, consisting of 11 lots of ground with balk-hemi,"on the North River. The yard is thoroughly fitted up in every way, and has valuable piivilt;gee—is capable of staring 15000 Ems of Coal.— The lease has 55 years to run—will be sold at a rea sonable price. For further - particulars, apply to - LEWIS W. MILLIE'S, Feb 16, .6i-4 2m ' P. O. Box 1050. New York. • IWIIIIELER. de WILSON'S FAMILY TO' .Sesviug dlachinest.--Call at Or. Mb and NorsveglanSts. Miss A. STRABOHIe R. GILBERT. Pottsville, Oct.. 6. 66-40-6 m. VlOll. MALE.=—A three-story "Brick Dwelling I. House and Lot in Mcovies Addition, Potts ville,! at present occupied by Charles M. Rill, Baq. Possetslon given on first of Avail next.— Apply to :THOS. R. BANNAN, Pottsville. • Feb 9, .1211 • MO WN LOTS FOR ISAIAH in the Main -Imoth Vein Coal Company's Addition to the Bor ough of 8t Clair; Schuylkill County. Perunt, Then lota are located on- the MITI Creek and are convenient •to all the Mill Creek Collieries and to the celebrated Black Band Iron Ore Vein, which is,now fully devel oped at the Shaft of Z. W. McGinns. on the Mam moth Vein Coal Co.'s land, and is Bald by co tent judges, to be the best Iron Ore yet discovered the Ste.e. No doubt extensive !Furnaces. Rolling Mills and Steel Works will shortly be erected on the primer ty. The Mill Creek and Mine Hill Railrraid pasoes -tbroughlhe property, giving facilities and convenienc-,. ea (mall kinds of buess. For terms, &c.. apply to • - • A. HART, President, Nor. 480 Library St, Phlladelphia, or to JOAN SEIITZINGER, Sect'y, St: Clair. • Jan 12,'6T . VON. BALE.—A slaty foot lot and two sto.: ry house on Mahantongo street; now occult pied .by Thomas IL Walker,, Deg. Poseetadon occu pied, on Mayl(lB67. Apply to Dec. 29, , 66 52- FRANICIM B. GOWltlq. FFORallAlf.tE..—The dwelling !gamily occupied by John 8, Gram In Morris.Addition._ Possession, given immediately . Address FRANK. CARTER,. Real Estate Agent, Mahanoy City, Penna. April 21, *GO. • . . . 16-tf I. .FOB MALE.—A lot of second-hand Machinery: viz:-1 Steam engine, 10-horse power with boil ers, fire fronts, pmnp,..k.e-, all , complete, sultablo for a small foundry. Also 1 Portable Rustle with boiler and governor, &c.. all complete, about 4-horse power.: Also about 12 tons T Also about 6 tons Sheet Iron. : • Also 5 Drift Cars that have been need in atlope-40 inch gunge. For sale at the Machinery Depot of • -Sept 22 - , '6O-02-tf . ..TABEZ SPAR: Coal St.. VAL VA RI, E REAL ESTATE. AT. PRIVATE SALE.—The interest of the nn dersigned,tein,g the undivided half of the well known Hotel property, situate on the southwest cornerti of CAIoWIIIII and Centre streets, In the Borough of Pottsville, will be sold at private sale. - - This . Property was formerly known,as the Exchange, nowss the linlon Hotel, and ill one:of the . 'hugest 'and mast valuable Hotels in the Borough of Pottsville: . • Jan-12, 417-.441 - ISABELLA PALMER. MINING !LORIN - EBY ANIY MA . TEEMS FOR SALE. ' One tocornotive Engine. , •Two 40-horse Power Engines with gearing for hoist ingand praMang. . . One 20-horse power Engine and breaker machinery. One small Pumping Engine. . • • ' • 80 drift are in good order. ' ' Also a lot of :T and Plat Bar Balls, Wheels, Axes, Wireltopek Mains, &0., Ac. Apply P. W. SHEARER, Engineer of Mines, Pottsville. - Nov. 10..68 . - • .. • 40. VALEALBILE IRON PROPERTY FOR KALE.....TIIRDRGAR IRON WORKS, Richmond January 16, 1567.1 ire offer- for sale on reasonable terms, our Six.Ckold . Blast Charcoal Farnaces,:vis Cloraer Dale, Catawba, Grace, -Rebecca,' Australia and Mount Torry, situated in the counties of Bontelourt, Allegheny and Augtusta,An ' the. valley' of Virginia.— ThetaparitY of these furnaces at present is from 1200 to 1500 tons each, per annum, and the metal is of an perlor quality, being particularly . adapted for car wheels, ordnance,: 111:d. other - descriptions •of mann factrsre requiring great strength. -For making steel by theßessemer process, our. belief is, that these irons cannot be Surpeseed. ' These furnace prOperties to gether contain about fifty' thomsand acres. • They are in,geod repair, and could be . pat into bleat in a few weeks.. The Installs brought to market by the Sameeltiver Canal and the. Virginia.' Central Railroad. - Parties, seeking such investments, by eddreesing us at Richmond,' will' be 'furnished with a detailed description of these properties. . • JftliA.VT-4-..;m• It. AND RIMY A , CO: .vALtrAuriLE ritovenart . tintlliale. —The =dere:limed offers for sale' in the Borough of Pothnille.ta.comer lot on Mauch Chunk and Coal Streets,' thereupon a double' two-itory Brick Dwelling _Rouse and a one And a half story frame 'home which Is occupied , as a Restanrant. The , lot contains 143 feet. on Mauch Chunk street WO feet on Cial street. This property is' one-of the -best lo cated for store or hotel in Mir Borough. • : :Abe4s bbldiek lotsbetweerf Port Carbon and Potts - - villa. be:m=l location for building lots for Me- Wanks- laberer4 &C The water pipei have been Ltte j.j, laid - by the ' Pottsville 'Water Company .all aloug these-lota.' They' are near the . Pothiville Agricultural • Part -Grognic, The las are ,offered .iO3tvggislpy.-;- 'l"erms vrill mede knowit.' _ Also acres of land favorably known ' as the.Womh lbg Bun Phew; 50 acres are In cultivation,- 10 arms out fit veinier grab, fracres of over $OOO - gbpe vhma of the . an orchard' with 150 trees; part of thdm in dPples, -Pears. ;Peach* Cherries, 57e. of theltrpt claps fruit, two substantial Ifarm' . banes .withlarge gardens, large- istabXe4, lee - imam rEmning Armada water 00: 11 pump; the eta blei For further- trifoirmdkinkpply to- GED. LACKS, Orchsrcijkowerli..PCdteiffb, Pa. ' , PRIRPENTY AT—VAR :II MALTS 14.&&11L—One-tvomtieth bit t erest the hat of wallamtin New Cagle. Tipwrwhlpw Okinti (known - ae the Pelt & -Daum tracta .00ntain : tn ig lrof 42 4o=4Of Bin due Indl&w Ints on . East Norwegian ,at i above ladmon-90 feet, a never lai/big spring Or Witter. lot on corner of Norm _mtd,ltte abOut" .120. feet equine, with-two momory brick houses the on. be sold low. - 4. : • • • - Valtuible- building iota an •OW; .Washingtere, and flabudzmgctatteets. - Desirable sites -for warehoineei tnanufattorkva &t, giendid.lot, Ave twig feettrent 'on Qualm= and OSA* &coot on r t =bMweet - iiift2"' Tract of 11. in fictinyikM Township,. to ekee the edge Of the late *: The ProPertY; containing about die sini4 coat and 'timberland,: la the tract from whkth-Pliny- Esq., mined hkeelebrate& Mari racO', `lt *NlP toad that the "WM:ma Black tuna 0re,..! and gm xelo'rfonntatriworkal-ney run *trash - this tract. Will be Mild - low. V t .g. ; Heat kitialeknA temlnuatte Agent; tomer deomelarid: IstaWtsfillev Bt.— • • - " 12411 g.n4*lk: . TWAWE...—Plad!) ZaPi.T4C lake t3ll lfozE 4Me i lt rteherits 40' 4 5 ...,•111m.T4 pftest...rttoongt:-:: ,i,. -BeldThir-newAiltstoelr i , -Ise4pigiethinklaotbthie:iitherit 41 11 4= N rikoo IS 4 0 F OILS WWl' mod.ideek' Vac at , monk, , 00. 1 . 14“li tDEC icztat Arrallgill7t x 'atiendbi— el =it ai r sod OM& :rims* htmwtHAST - •• - • THE 7, (31:11,EAT CL - ,9TIII,A:G:::iIOITSE -.'... ii.HiLiptimmA. :.''.-'..- BARGAINS COTHIIIC I. ~.R9ololla7k WEAN, 13R °YM EMINE CIAYI'ffES(I BALL, 603 and 60S-Cltestunt Street, PHILADELPHIA. Ready-Made (no th ing Department. :''The chalet:et go& 11EADY-hEADE CLOTHING, FALL AN WINTER WEAL ,offerea.l toixirCbjem comtkrislng ago NRWEST AND MO' APPROVED SWIM Custom Ihputhienti Oar newly fated niendatta Nda:nerd' flit &mile men, Youths and ;Bo" now_contani dorthalls se= _ . , _ Porcuip .m 4 Domostio Go . wittet6re are imperil; to make to order m the beet Inutee, ens at recsonable pica: . Boys' Department, , , , have on hand•• the largest and best stork o Ready-Made Bow Clothing In the City. Parttenlar orderattention . paid to. the making 'of Boya Clothing to . ' f 3 it i l s 4 7 11 - 1.!1 .1 4 1 f-11 1 -11 7 . ! al el 11 , 1;1 1 114 , - 9 F., 1 Kl o tz/ 4 . si s Bentlemen, Youths and . Boys, Vilehitig clothing made to:order:by sending . their mettanz per &wain, will have their ordereprompt ly -. to. SATISFACTION AND A4300I) FIT OUARANTERD Samples sent to imp part of the (Algal States. .110CHIIILL dic- WILSON, Brown Slane Clonaine hall, 603 and 666 • Cheitnat Ml., PIIILLADELPIIIA. October 6, .66 • 40-im tf 1867. 1867. Greenwood Nursery, POTTSVILLE. Spring `We have for sale at Ulla Raillery a fine assortment of FRUIT TREES, embracing all.the choicallada of - Pear, Peach, , Apricot, " Apple,. " Cherry, Plum, - . Crab Spill°, • Quince, dc., Dwarfs and Standards, selected with-care for this cll. mate,,by the single dozen- or hundred. We have also, a number of Trees of EXTRA SIZE IN ,BEARING, many of which will be sold low, as we are clearing air a portion of the ground.% . ' Shade and Ornamental Tres In variety, not subject to the depredations or worms ETiprgreens, Box Edging, arc., Embracing the most hardy and . choke kinds (or deco rating yards, garden; grounds or cemeteries. Garden and Yard Shrubbery Of all kinds, for ornamenting wt.* &c. Osage, Orange Plante, The best hedge plant now 'nine. SMALL FRIHTS, SUCH AS Raspberries; choice kinds, . Foreign Mammoth - Gooseberries, American Gooseberries. • ,!• - That will not mildew. ILawton and other Blackberries, White Grape,' • Cherry and tither Currants, Bhstbarb and Asparagus Plants CHOICE, STILAWBERIIN PLANTS. Aa the productiveness of Strawberries depend a great deal on the soil, we.havo selected those varieties that suit this climate. We can furnish the-ALBANY SEED "LING, TRIOMPH DE GAN D, the*AGRICULTURAL -IST, and .Dr. - Knors celebrated JACUNDA, or MO. the most productive: kind now raised in the United States. All our . plants are genuine, and we can far" niett them in large or smallquantities. . G mtPg VIMI9 . . For general cultivation we can recommend the fol lowing for this Re.gion:—The DELAWARE, CON CORD. DIANA, HARTFORD, PROLIFIC, ADIRON DACK, RODGER'S HYBRIDS, 'MAX %TAWNY, WRITE. and Dr. Grant's: celebrated lONA GRAPE, which la pronounced equal In quality to any foreign grape—also, hisISRABLLA. GRAPE, which is superi or to the Isabella. All these Grapes arc hardy', and ri pen In this region before the Isabella. As we are the agent of Dr. Grant in this County, we can. tarnish his vine genuine at Ids prices, in large or !Mall quantities. We will guarantee all the vines we sell as to name. Notwithstanding the large number of vines now propagated, the demand is larger than the supply.,' GREEN-HOUSE PLANTS. We heie extended oar Greenarmses by the erection of smother large one, making three in number, and are prepared to furnish all kinds or Green-Honso Plants, wholesale and retail, atthe lowest rates. Our Plante are In excellent condition, and we are determined that there shall be no necessity to go abroad for Plants that can be raised at, home. - . CDT PLOWER% BON - JETS and ORNAMENTAL • WRRATRSIUrnisked at the Green - Ecwaea• • ItirPlans for Greenaouses and Conservatones fur nished and building superintended. Gardena, yards and Lemetery lots laid out and orna mented. Trees. ac., planted when desired. • • Store—orAppl at Greenwood or or at Bannaws Book address B. BANNANCRAR LES CRUM:- NEL L , Greenwood Nursery, Pottsville, Pa. • • THE PNEUMATIC OR BRO. 111 C. ! . NEMER PROCEPOI. • TO MANUFACTURERS OF IRON AND STEEL : The Proprietors and Assignees of the several Letters Patent granted by the United States to Henry Besse mer and Robert Mtushet. of England, and to William Welly , ' of this country, for certain Improvements In the Mantifacturo of Iron and Steel, having, for the pup. oee of avoiding all conflict of claimil thereunder, con solidated their interests in said patents under a true,- teeship, styled oThe Trustees of the Pneumatic or Bessemer Process of making Iron and Steel," the un dersigned, the Trustees aforesaid, invile attention to the advantages of the, above process, which can be fully and freely examined at the works of Messrs. Winslow & Griswold, at Troy, N. Y. Y. The great STRENGTH, TOUGHNESS, perfect HOMOGENEITY and comparative CHEAPNESS Ofs PRODUCTION, of the Pneumatic oiliessemer Vast Steel, as well as the enormous extent of .its manufacture and use abroad, are too well known to recolrecemment • and the undersigned are pleased to state, that Works have been, and others are now being erected in different sections of the country, , to supply, In part, the demand so rapidly increasing here for STEEL RAILS, AXLES, TIRES, -BOILER PLATES, FORGINGS, &c., &c., made by'their prceess: ' - Licenses will now be issued on reasonable:-terms to all who desire to engage in the new, manufacture, and the undersigned hereby give notice that they have sp. • • pointed 'Bir:Z; 8. DIIIIFEEi of 418,Malunt Bg., Philadelphia thew General Agent, for the management of this department 'of their bed ness,'mul, that all onmuunlealloxer respectlngLlcerwes„ and Inquiries concerning the Process and cost of the apparatus therefor, &c., dce., should be addressed.to MI art above. JOHN P. WINSLOW, Troy, N. Y. JOHN A. GRISWOLD,Trusteei. DANL.4. 'MORRELL, Johnstown, Pa.! • January 5, 17 • , 1-dm. . BEST MUSICAL' INSTRUCTORS. TBZ BEST PIANOFORTE . B°CIK- Richardecore X THE BEST ORGAN B OOS . i ii . hrel , A Modern School - CAB ORGAN BOOR." Is Winner's Perfect Guide:. TBKI3IIST.M.BLODBON BOOK Is &andel% Irustmctor.. ..... THE in= =WI BOOK • - • Is Earths' Method TEE BEST VIOLIN BOOK - • ' - Is.Fessendenro Modern School THE BEST FLUTE BOOK . •L Berhlgaters Method THE BEST VIOLINCELLO BOOK' Ts Bomberaos 5ch001. ......... nig BEST AMORDEON BOOK - - Ie Wineerhs Perfect Guide THE BEST FIFE AIND FLAGEOLET BOOK Are,Wfaincre Guides. each THE BEST CLARINET-AND DULCIMER Are Winnee Perfect °side, 7 5 t and Low's instructor THE BEST BANJO BOOK 6 bi Mgr. oopplete Instructor. TIMM:ST OONCENTKINA BOOK . Are Bindltre Complete Preceptors, each—, 60 OLIVER DITSON Publishers, 277 Washing ton Street, Boston. • • Peb 23, ,61—.3tc . 1867.;: '. . - r 1867. .GREENWOOD NURSERY O.TRAWBERtir, „PLANTS, drq..- ..c, 1, ,I/ ; ,-• k * - ' ' bas for sale several this The :Siabsoriber ealtd.Strawbertz Pints: .eutbracing the Azistuvr 81111IDLINan which 'ls the =eV certain ;. bearer ..runi-nesst;4rodnittnre.— TEIOMPII doedillijp - overvlcrlie Btrawbern, with a good fiiirof sad also production. '-The AGM. CIIILTEILI.LIIST' 'aidr4, to he a very productive market bony. Also Dr:4olWe EACUNDA. "Or 700,' vibirtr3e , the moat extraordinary Strawberry now VOWEL : * __OCIWOr blie , ,end, product:bream. Pro ducing ID faMWdolLiextriordlnary crops. Gensler) the ;Itirve sold In large or small quantities at 4:f-a - -- 4 1 - 41 MOWlafikikillf, Pottsvile: R *lc a Stv - Thosovi llos_Mintalsitsrse quantities win please Bpi In theirorders early.. - UNIONTHAMS Are prontninied , by thiee whom them, EQUAT: TO AXE' -Emirs EXTANT • Tbei selected- front only are earn. redbogs. 'and the , lngredlenta used in auing all of the very beetqui2 m Particular cue hi alio: taken to keep them In only tong are, enough to re, which pre. ;tents getting too Balk-* great and general 'halt with moot hams, None genuine unleee branded. - . . A. -- F::CHESEDItoIteit Co" _PORK PACKERS, AXD WHOLESALB DECAL/rap IN • Fint, - CHESSit AXIXPROVIECIONS, • tailukat Delaware? Alirtnisa, Philatta, Itlekablehig Curing illitabliabment. S. IL carnet tottrenAjleadlltn, • ' Math 9." IA 10-6 m 7.l:tiE, AI . sEPIETWIS T AITUTE -FOLEITTAIIAL OhliF4 , I ~:,-;', " 161 •tit ' ilaili.0 1 1 11 0 0 .'irsrl! ' • 4111421161011m4100: mittithe 'Albeit tistitil 6 frao , aleois Mat els IMensee l ii a imolai ernoelope jest freq. ad mind IA Vieszl• snd you .;:vo4'ledratitrlblVitaadyeettalndo raystetiaa are bripaittabOnthablorearesow larsaget 1 . d I:maw . Ibielease a stV for Mg' abut ID znitmaivßimFm - 1 ,10 - BON ' ,, t .Zlo=4ll fl 7, 2 ', Novir.' 'lO3-4649 - - * I : ' ; To ' ! tilank-Bookk-:4P67. . I 'Llire tu tpridar-maciPOot iitan.Parfigm li act pat itinOffilelmid ia galt'aCeltue 4 , wookreut. 0 40 1 11614 oF - New York, - la z, ,_ 4, i - r-I.L. 7 . , Akielkiteliegnit loattiallai-, W U T m 2 . I q* **an tf tilMil rift eg;ll46 V , :: , I - W I FSOpiDit 'YEW BOOKEU1) 101r101Wriatatt Dixon. PM BlustatilasifraftDool"-Oni.iptete ;Mt. on • ta Y , ti atC 6 a ., 4, 4310=1 , T 4-006 , BrPwne sor , tWeregotokihroimigt— rootonipt , Saturday i ; March 16, 1567. 1.14±; LATEST; NEWS, TERRIBLE MURDER. The. Superintendent of a Colliery . Waylayed and. Shot, A REIGN OF, TERROR IN' SCUUYL- Yesterday afternoon about 3 o'clock, Mr. William Llttlehales, Superintendent of the Qlenn Carbon Coal Company, was murdered at a lonely portion of the road, near'his resi dence at the Colliery, Glen, Carbon, Cass Township. He had driven from Pottsville at i o'clock, in a. sulky, and the assassins lay In-ambush, expecting that he had with him a large amount of money to be used -in paying the men at his Colliery today: In . this they were mistaken, for the money was left in Pottsville to be taken to the mines to. day. Mr. Littlehales" had no money with . him. One ball pierced his head, another his breast. He-fell into the road from his sulky,. dead, where the murderers searched tha body, taking from it his revolver. Mr. Lit.- tlettales was about .40 years of age: r~ [',~ ~ ~' ~~ The perpetrators or the murder arc un- The Coroner went out late yesterday after. noon to hbld an inquest, and we have not leaned any additional particulars. - This 'fresh murder, 'cold _blooded and bru tal, shows that there is in this County do pro tection for life or properly from the bands of assassins that-infest It. Measures should be adopted. at once to establish a military post here for the protection of tbe people. Tit 9 Legislature should act. Gov. Geary has ex.: pressed his willingness -to cooperate in any measures that will drive from. our Co . tnity, the murderers and robbers who infest it, and wbo regard not the law, of man or Gcrd. We would in view of this last terrible deed of blood, which has taken from our midst a Most estimable citizen, suggest the calling of a public meeting to take steps to have a military post established in this County. 1807. Ireuifitzt Ctenvention is lauy. The Fenian State Convention of Illinois met on \tit 41- nesday, indorsed the policy of Mr. Roberts, and inti. mated what moot lriohmen believe—that the present revolt was precipitated by the treachery of Stephens. An address will be Issued advising the &Maim to unite with the Reform movement in England, upon the Just ground that not the English people but the British ellotemment Is responsible for the wrongs of Ireland_ The Memphis'Appeal saps: would be a gain to , the country to subotitute decent negroes for some drunken senators and debauched repraeentath•cs in Mingress." , Mr. Saulibury will not relish this, beim; hit he the house of his friends. The Lower Branch oc e mtchugetts Legislature. has retitled the constitutional amendment. - There was very little disposilton to operate in stocks in Philadelphia on Timmtlav,.but prices were steady.--- In flour there is a fair bniiness doing. Wheat, rye and oats were unchanged. Corn was In per bustiv.i . higher. ELECTIONS THIS WEEK FFRST OIIN OF THE CAMPAIGN • (WEAN ILLPUBLIOAN VIOTORT-GEN. n mckniwars fIA i.l= ITT MAGI' 300. Commie, N. H., March 12.—Returns. front DU town.. give Harriman 20,450, Sinclair 1T,4J3. . The nikk..ritv for Hen. Harriman will be about 3,000 in the whole State. The Republicans have ele&ed all three Congress men by majorities of about LOOO each. They probably elect nine, hi the twelve) State Sena tors; tour of the dye Councillors, and will probably have 75 majority in the Ronne. The result is mare favorable to the Republicans than was generally expected. We have returns from 125 towns which ¢lva ILiril man 25,097 volts, and Sinclair and stulteriug2 . 2,ls2 votes. file, In the Ist Coniresslonsi Digrict is probably elected by 1,200 majorityp, and Stevens in the ltd Die. tract, and Benton in the Ilid District., by about, 1,000 majority each. . The Council will stand four Republicans and ono Democrat. In the Senate eight Republicans ;tad four Democrats aro probably elected. .In the house there' is a Republican majority of SO. The Republicans have a majority In six counties, snd the Democrats in four. counties. The vote in the State will exceed the yolk of last year, in the aggregate, by 1,010 to 2,000. Thu whole vote of the State will exceed 07,1100. The ui 1- jority for Garrlmsu for Governor will probably exoee,l 3,000. . . . . .. ... „ .. BANGOR, Me., March 11 .— At the municipal election held here, to-day. Albert G. Wakefield was elected Mayor by a vote of 1.B& to 74.'3 for S. IL Dale, and 113 for J. S. Ricker.. Ideesrs. Wukedeld and Dale arelitith Republicans. The City Council is nearly all Republi can. The Democrats made no tight as Democrats. Yew Jersey ISCPCIIILICAN cre7roni - A7. e1m:T:2.411% • - PHILADELPHIA, Marith 12.--The municipal electiOn was held at Camden, to-dny. and Cox, the He. publican candidate, was elected Mayor -by, about 2O majority'. The whole Republican ttcket war elected in two Wards, and partly in the other one. ' SAN Faarreisco, March 13.—The municipal eection at Sacramento yesterday resulted In the election of tho Union ticket by- a large majority, Kir A fire occurred at Washington city, on Fri day night laat, which destroyed a large building on the southwest corner of Pennsylvania Avenue and Sixth street. The upper portion wad former ly occupied as trio Central Hotel ; the lower part as the auction rooms of Lolly A Bros:, and the basement was a restaurant. rho loss is estima ted at $lOO,OOO ; insurance $12,000. Six or seven persona are said to have been killed by the falling of the walls. • SPEER'S PORT GRAPE Wure.—Dectdedly one of the nicest and most creditable of any advertised article we have ever seen, is the vinous fluid bear ing the above name, from the vineyard of Mr. - M inn/Speer, of Pamiie, N. J: Tuis wine is ex preaged from.the Port Grape, a species, originat ing in Portrigal,..which, under the hand of Mr. Speer, has been brought to a state of great ritr fection. The Wine possesses the very: highest • medicinal virtues; and certainly as an article of beverage, it is nut, in our judgment, to be sur passed in color, taste, or any of the tit-edifies which constitute a pure, mild, and igecable wino. —Boston. Transcript. Our druggists have procured some that is lour years old, direct from the vineyard, and fur-. Weir information and testimonials as to e the vir tues of the Sambuci.. . • PENNI3TLVANIA LEGISLELTIII4E. .11A81119817E13, March B.—The Benito passed number of acts on the private calendar, and then adjourned until "Tnesday morning.. - - . • Honsz.—ln the House Mr. Waddell introduced a bill to increase the revenue or the common.. - wealth, by imposing a tax of ten cents ou each too Of coal mined by and not consumed by any com pany for its own use. The bill increasing the fees of county officers in the State; except in Philadel phia, was passed at the afternoon cession. March 12.—Strink.—The Committee on . Pen sions and Gratuities was instructed to report ei ther an amendment or reperti of the tot granting annuities and pensions to' soldiers of the war or 1812. An act appointing ah additionalLaWTudgo for Schuylkill county wad vigorously urged by Mr. Randall, on the ground that the business of-the county required the additional 'fudge. The bill was passed to third reading and laid over. Ad journal. "- House. =Upwards of two lizindred bills were in troduced. 'Among these bills were the following ; Fixing the pay of members of the General Assem bly st . slooo ;inflicting a fine on auy phibioian (other than one regularlylicensed s as a graduate) who practices in Philadelphil. March 13.--Bzsarm—air. Randall read an act to authorize the Commissioners of Schuylkill enmi ty to aid the- construction of the Manufacturers and Consumers' Anthracite Railroad. Also; a bill requiring the Philadelphia and Roadiog Railroad and the Schuylkill Navigation Companies to dis- - , tribute to each coal operator whose works am on , their respective lines as many cam per diem as are his allotted fir 6 rata share. Room—Mr. Wharton introduced areaalntion for the appointment of a committee to report a . statement setting forth the names of th's banks, banking hmtitutions, bankers or individuals in which or With whom the money of the common wealth has been deposited during the &eat year ending the 30th'of November,lBl36;and whether - any interest' hair been paid to or is to be paid to the State :Trimisurer or to any other individual, and whether any arrangement can he made where by interest "upon the balances remitting RI the treasury can •be secured for the benefit cif the commonwealth. After a discussion; the nesolu- - ' tion was indefinitely postponed., ' A rcommucica-. lion from the State Treasurer, stating that ho would report a list of the depositories, was then - read. 'The Plttabarg.and'Connellsville Railroad -bill was — then diicnssed Up to - the adjournment.- Ati the afternoon seat - ion the Senate -big` (-Aid ing a penalty of 1400 for the exclusion of negrues from railroad cars was considered; and passed to third reading. Also, the hill fixing seven.p4 cont. aa.the legal rate, of interete.. ETHIOPIAN ENTERTAINMENT. at trzsion BALL, March 224 and 23d, 1862.—F0X RENO'S MIN STEEL TROTIPIC will appear with -many new. and tri teresting features. This Troupe is composed of young .men of this Borough, and will guarantee mitre satis faction. Tickets for sale - at Befiname,- Bost/shell Wsers; and Garriguee• Book .Stores, at Saylor% Drug Slore, andlakuet's Saloon. MarchjiG-11-1t• Corismerrioa Ccacni.n.—Real the Certificateit.:-Hav ing used your so evied -Exu:ue," as a remedy for billions affection and dyspeplia, lc affords me plrarnre to acknowledge that It has done for ma that *ditch other msdidnes prethinKir and frequently taken, could not. or least, did notffixt. - lam N 0 lone trottbled with the headache, nor with any of those WORMS ainiCtIOUS which eye; acCOmpatly dyspepsia. •l would.therefore heartily recommend. Its twat° ail r;ersoits similarly salla -W..' hoping' that they goo may be restored to health. Yours Respectfulty, . P. C.:11". LaNIPN, Pastor BL James. Lutheran Church; Reading, Fs. • ..• Pa,april 41, 1968. "Ifatesien has reilly diingw ond. era: Peter Cisaaielderortio was near dying from ccatiampkies. ban Wen motored aM.4 ealoytog his heallatki Now there b a y(lBB,baft bx flip name Of who is also In a fatadvaneedstsge of aossais to rtailand &shell to melbas !Sstene.r. You Win Webbed* Ma dollar. note !or sir bottles of this good medklne; to be sent - without' delarby itz• prow golrremoatvwtdetris the nekrest-Fsphas Mite. . • , —Ray.„I.SAAQ WHIM 1)1 111012141 , YL0W Asttsville. • 7 C.' O:IIAGENBUGH; Matutatly Ctty. - •IL 111191•103c.Clair" , • , f _- and by all Dratioista Wholeiste Agents. Tolutstoo t Itolkosay italsdatfgita• • •• • A @rani, Rest -ties and got" lialfrione44,4:l4- arredadalsgices;d I?; smµha,[ptc yst VW: anit-WWer r-nd erd c 4i N c*PAhtldned at D. kernitiq, 961#0 feet''; I ...arqmtter....l ll ßt z tti T 4# 4 l. Y titie ) : C 0 ,44 0 0 11.1 . 410 0,,VM " I=ISEEI KILL COUNTY. New Ilaiwpehirt; Millooll4lCtilotrA4 CalHoraia. ISLIOTTON or TILE CH lON TICK/T, LOCAL NOTICES
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