Pr 4 : (1' Trime-89, 23 .yet suntill4 - 1031thle in radfanq►- $3 0011 not Fed in advance. - • There terms will bee t hl' : M:tared to bistaithin TO CLI • . Three copies to one address On avanm.......ti 3 00 roam 30 00 Club vribforiptione must invariablybepaldinadvance. -.- The JommaL will be ftunished to Carriers !adorn= :13-4 PO per we copies, cash on delivery. Clergymen and School Teacher,. will be farnkh ed with the JOCENAI. at $l.. b 0 In advance. or $1 75 if paid within the pear--over one Year hill este& . BA 'll3 et OW ADVER.WIDOING • Fcr 3 includtm date. - oneineertlon. le rte. and subfeqqent insrrtious 25 cents. One equate of 7 lines, a d o ,er a limes, forl'or 2 insertions $1; 8 insertions ?5 : Fulrequezt In.ertions, 25 amts per Kum, Tam. lines, with date, 41 00 38 00 $3 50. SACO lines, and over 3, ..:3 00 - 4 00 700 -' 18 00 Two squares, Or 14 lines, 500 .G.OO 10 00 .18 00 Three -•"' ." 21 " • 700 ." 800 14 00 ' .20 on Lines-over a square, 17 Ceuta aline ElpeCial Notl. ces, per cent. higher. Local Notices, 20 cents aline- One inch space is equal to twelve lines. - Larger Advertisements as per . agreement • Nine words constitute a line. ir - The circulation of. the' du - wan is not minded by paper published lathe Stale of Philadelphia or Pittsburg,. and it la now the largest sheet published n Pennsylvania. '." . Within the last five years the eubteri - ptiou. BA was doubled. end it continues to Increase rapidly. As an Advertising medium it la one of the. ben in the Viahs, COAL TR A TYE .A_IYVER`IIISENEEN'TS. ~i - s = __ - ~i-= _ -_ -~~~_ Terminus of the Philadelphbt Pier No. 16, Pt. nichnuma. QIIINTARD, WARD, & CO. 9 Pine Street, New York. 220 Walnut " k'hiladelphia. ,21 Kilby " Boston. COAL OF ALL KINDS BY THE CARGO, J. W. DUNKI_,EE & CO., SIMPERS OF COA.L. Pier No. 19, Port Richmond. AGENTS FOR Manchester Bed Ash, New Haven and Lo cust Mountain White Ash. OFFICE 2.0.5,V WALNUT ST., PIIILADM.PHIA. July 21, 1,11 29-0 • . Pier No.' 17, • ROMMEL . & HUNTER, anottsAt DEALERS It FIRST QUALITIES OF • ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS • C O OFFICES ;-295 Wuhan St.,.Bbilada: No. 1 Rector and 73 Broad - way, New York.• .111 d 23 Doane St.; Boston. Feb. 16, '67. 7- Pier No. 9. • BANOROFT, LEWIS & Co. , xrce AND &UPPERS or SEE Celebrated ASHLAND. COAL, FROM MATILNOY 'MOUNTAIN, OFFICE-111 Walnut Street, Commercial Building, Philadelphia, - New x orl: Office-71 Cedar Street. .Boston Office--7 Doane Start. [Oct. 23; idS Pier . I‘lo. 11, AIUDENRIED & CO., Wholetude Dealem In the best varieties of Anthracite - and BitOainotie Coale. (20 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. OFFICES : 110 Broadway, New York. . 1.4 1 ,101 by Street,Boston. - . Pioneer Shippers from Elizabethport, of . LEHIGH, SPRING MODN. TAIN, HAZLETON, AND COUNCIL RIDGE COALS. (.59 13. Pier 'No. 10 Port Richmond. . JOHN H. WHITE EtSON, SHIPPERS • OP COAL, . No, 316 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. • DEPOTS POE STORAGE AND SALE OF COAL : ' No. 800 West Thirteenth St., New York. • . Third Avenue and Forty-ninth St., New York. Ives , Wharf, Providence, Rhode Island. • • . ' August 4, 'tia . . BI- PHILADELPHIA, &,c. SCHUYLKILL NAVIGATION. Shipping Wharves for ANTHRACITE COAL at LEWIS AUDENRIED & Co., AGENTS FOR THE SALE OF THE Wolf Creek Diamond Coal Co.'s Dia mond Red Ash, and Black Reath White Ash Coals. - • r 205 Wabint Street, Philadelphia.: OFFICES: 110 Broadway, New York. - Lti Kilby strut, Boston. Feb 17, .GG Wharf No. A. REPPLIER BRO. • IN. E. tor. Walnut A; Fourth era.: PUN. OFFICES: 4 3O . Pine Street, New York. • I..Merchwate . Bank Ballding,'Prcrridence. DAVIS PEARSON ilk ItOZEIS AND SHIPPERS OF CELEBRATED LOCUST 'MOUNTAIN WHITE ASH .. and SPORN VEIN . . ED ASH COA-L: • . "No: 138 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. • • OFFICES: But ng ICcm'fic. No. TriDUY ,No.ll Doane Street, Boston. WHARF—GREENWICH, •DELAW.A.RE AVENUE. ATI PIATAOTI, PHILA. ~I:IIANCYL 11ABT, ASULATID. DAVIS, FILES & Go,, • SHIPPERS OF ANTIIRACITE A BITUMINOUS COAL,- (igts. for llym orith.Coal Co.'e Wllkeabarre . Coal.) Once, Np! 333 Walnut St., Philadelphia. Nov 24, 'GS - 47- AUDENREED,..NOVICIN & Co., Miners and Shippers of) 0 'AL :L. . . . LOCUST MOUNTAIN—from HAZEL DELL COLLLIIIT. SH A MOKlN—from 11NTIRPEIRI COLIARIT. GEORGE'S CREEK CUMBERLAND—from the OM. BOLMATION MINIMS Or MABILA111). 32S Walnut. street. Philadelphia. OFFICES: 1 119 Broadway, New York. 27 Doane Street, Boston. April 7,' .66 14-tt LAMA ILOTELEILVZL. • J. L. MANI& - ROTHEBREL & SILLIER; • ICINKRA AND SIIIPPrE, or . ANTHRACITE & BITUMINOUS • .G OAD Sole Agents for the SaleOf the Caurnasyso Lo 008T MOUNTAIN Cost, from the CENTILILIA. COLLVFML, 0 4 1ces:-311 'Wahine Street, Philadelphia. 111 Broadway, N. P., and .11 Donne• Street, Boston. Whoroes;—Windmill Island, Plqa. ; Port Richmond; 3! ay 14,.L6 40-tt J. R.. TOMLINSON, SHIPPER OP 4 C 3 CO Ank. Ma 7 (13ylichaylkill Canal,) NO. 309 WALNUT ST., PHILADELPHIA. • • " Heels ippini 'Wharves t Polt or ALLEOHENY AVENUE. Port Ricbmprd, LAUREL STREET WHARF, go:mint:lo.- March 17,'64.3 • • 11-17 ' MAMMOTH VEEN c CoNSOLIDATED - COAL CO. Oar HICKORY and BROAD MOUNTAIN COALS ere now sold excluelvely by DAY, 11117DDELL dr CO. . Perldea ordering from them, may always depend upon receiving a pure talkie. A. B. ALMON, • Treasurer. Philadelphia, 18h Feb ,6T ELIZABETIIPORT. COAL. A. T. STOUT & COAL. Miners and Shippers of the celebrated "Fulton" & "Stont" (Lehigh) Ociabh FrOta the Bbervale Colliery and the Mont ConletY, near Hazleton, Pa.,- . And peelers In the best 'varieties:o . ANTHRACITE INO _BITIMINOES Delivered direct from the,taines or Mt' board of VW eels at ' ' • ' 'TRENTON N: J., 'I3ILIeABRIITPORT, N; J; N. BRUNSWICK, N. J.,PORT RICHMOND. PA. S OFFICE -.44 do 46 Trinity Availdhigh 111 Broadway, New York. . . A- T. STotrr. S. Vim Waciaz. . I f = 13rOtr: AP/11 4 . ' 64 . . • . 14- LORBERRY CREEK. tORBEBIZIE COAL. Ince, tbe undersigned;' aving consolideled our:Three lolled ce illlll. Lorberry &leen, sp tem:atter pinup act mutualness under the Wane of • • . MUM% (MAIM a as. .. • MILLER. ifITES.t Co. • GRAM! a NITISTREL Mr. GRAIiPP a member orour Arm; having ateriela ted himself wit h J. 7t. BLABISTON. will Philadelphia and all ottr eold shipped laytidomater be wader - the - extinctive crinUol 11.1,11ENT011, GRAM dr. By Increased tail!, and. attention - in its prepwaUmj hoopla maintain the reputation 'of onc:celchroted Lot. berry Coal. - Purchasers abroad our reky upon ;Atm Me coal &Mimed in MeV:2l = m 4r starder4 . • GRAMM Tab. la. • _ • . . _ Bay dee eel Sa4o.lloait&_, Ana iio6(l, ua. • Per spas _oily . by 731,11011 T Marcia '67 - • •••- fe. 4.. - ... . _ _.. ... .. - • . ~.....,.._,_,..,... ..-_,-.-::;-?- ,;::,::.---:_-, -- = , ,-,:: 1•. , ' -". 4 - -',.. - . - - 4 , - . . • 4 ,,,. -n, -',"'"'",--- -'"::.. % • ''' --74L:2-;.-1::..",i4.4.:4,-;:::—* r ,, TA.:= , 4.-40.-...5.:::; - - itarsoz.:L;,::::-..., -•-- -- % .-- e...- - -----,- . —..7•,._ - -..'• .., - ,,5,...4 .: ,,,,,, ..1.0: -.z. , -..z.,:--.,4,.. '4* V .-,.- ... t7i.!..,.1- t---...--------- ---w - - - - - --- --- - ----- -- ' -•- .---- . . . - ...... .. . _ ..._ _ . . . _ . , . • ~ .. --- .--....4....• A.- ------ _ ' -- '.---' " .. _ _ . ... _ ` ''. -, • , . - . - - , L-. - "... 7, -''. .:-.., „...,.. _...,.....4,- tA , ?... 4 4 4 r _ . ..-• -_- ---,- .....---. L. ... ' "-' - - .. __. ~..., ....,.: , .. 4 --- ;-- - -- - ----- f . - --- ,+ ~=*. . _ ~ • , = ,- . . , - , ..._ k:, =n .., c - -f-a - , — l- - . 7 .-';' , . - , - 1 -.- . ,- •••:--' ' '. . .4 i - -.- : '7l- 14. -Al= ' -4 k - . : ,-, i._ ~, . ..ir.:-2.4_,- .:-. - : -..- ~ • . ~..- ...,- _. _ ----- 5_,...-- 4r• • - - _ . .„ - ~.. _ k, ~.. „ . . ..... ~,, . ... .., ~ ._-, ' ' ' l''- ' l ‘'•g - - ''---- ,-;---- 1 r- . . . • RT ' Eli E ri.s.. . _ ... ... PITI3:LI.SItg,P. - - . .E:ygßy:::.*Tv.ApAy.:::::m_.Q.ANl.o,: - :=Atl:o+ - 4..y. - t3. sl.=---N0. : 12. R. IL, on theltelaware, Phtladelpida.--rers for the Maim! of iittuoOlteik N E Wif have appointed Maur*. HAMMETT Ac NEILL, 917 WALNUT STREET, PHILADEL PHIA. sole Agents for the see of our SILVERBB:O6K LEHIGH COAL, • From Port liehmoad, Philadelphia. 110811 E & LONGMTBEET, Enver Brook, Feb 41,196:. - HAMME.T.T &- NEILL, SIT Walnutlt.. Ililladetpltiet, OFFER FOR SALE the FOLLOWING CELEBRATED ANTHRACITE COA.LB nom POET inomwro SILVER BROOK , CLL4116 y .3 FIHRNANDOXit CITY, (White Ash,,) mined b Miller Maize, SPORN • and DIAMOND VBINSi Cited iiih)„ • . • Alio BITUMINOUS and' .CCUBBRLAND COALS of well. established reputation . . ' Piers 18 and 111. Port Richmond. , OFFlCES:—Prot.amarrac, 21T Walnut St. New Yuen; itooniP, Trinity Building. Plovonsoz. Weybonet Street.• ' Banos, on D 0 1 .1130 Street.: - March 2, ',67 9tf • BTIOKNEY & WELLINGTON Miners and Shippers of Coal. Burnside (hom their BuriuddeCoL at Bhamok IhewhiVein Med doh). - Loea.i Mountain (White MN. - ' {29 Trinity Building, New York. - OFFICES : 215 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. 15 Ellin , Street, Boston, 'Wharf No. ,6, Port Richmond, Philadvit. .Feb 24,'06 (May 16, .69-254) S. . • • , - Pier pro. 1.11.' . CHAS, .J.. & J. • L EASTWICK,' NO. 121 *SLUT STREET, PHELAN., SHIPPERS OF WHITE and RED ASH COAL; . Agent; for the tale of the celebrated BURNIDE From. the Luke Fidler -Colliery, ghamokiti, March 16,!61. 11.17 Pier No. 13: ". . . BORDA, KELLER 'NUTTING, Wholesale Dealers In Beat Varieties of - ANTHRACITE /I, BITUMINOUS .COALa • - 3 321 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, OFFICES: 42:ti Bub) , Street, Boston. Room 64 - Trinity Banding, N. York. idrSole Agents for Welt Lehigh' Green- - wood Coal and Coal from the Locust Mountain Colliery of the Mammoth Con. solidated Coal Company. . GEORGE CREEK BITUMINOUS on board at 8a11mr.=....,.0r mr.=....,.or Georgetown. [Aug 31, .661 11- NEW YORK. SAML. BQNNELL,.JR., . _ S G- B CH EEK •. • LEHIGT-1 COALS Wyoming, Lackawanna & Soranton,. Delivered on boird iteerseleat Piers Noe. 4,8 & 9, ELIZARETETOBT,.N.-5.. 01170 E-43 & 45 TRINITY 111 Broadway, Now York.• • May 12, 436 . - . . RICHARD Ja. MID. A. MASON. HECKSCHER d; MASON, ANTHRACITE & BITUMINOUS C . 0 _l4 OFFICE-NO. 71 BROADWAY, tEXPIRK BUILD. INQ,)'ROOM'34, NSW YORK. April P., .66 - . • - . 184/ DAIiIRL PACKER. R. A.PACRZEIR. DANIEL PACKER & Co., Lehigh, Schitylklll,lWilkesbarre, Lackawanna, CumbOrland, And Elk ' ELM Gas Coal Company • - COALS.. OFFICE—Ne;r4 Plate Street, New Tent. DAY, HUDDELL & CO., 2dINFILS AND IMPERILS OB ANTHRALTITE & BITITMINOUS to 109 Walnut St Phihultaplria. _ 111 Broadway,Crrinit Bu il ding? x. Feb 17 Dftne Street, Boston. - 1 :4 436 64y Jul; W. C. B. Cox...kr. Wu. Rao. OALDWELL. CONAk is. COIL 'll9 Br4idway, Ceraer , Cedar .111.; ,11.49 DBALBEiB IN • • . C-0 - S . • • LEBIGH,_ COUNCIL RIDGE, WILKESBABEE, MAHAIOY BED .ABB,\LOOUBT MOUNT AIN, CUMBERLAND BROAD TOP AND OTHER. ViIiTEITEEL FebSkt. 'B6 : : - WLLICESI3.ARRE . COAL., DLLITICIUM eraser nos rex XtN or rim . _ WILKESBAVIE - 00AL AND.IRON 00., • OR FOR RE-SHIPMENT AT Slissibetlipert mad Jersey CirY:' . • !Comm —NO. 'l6 ,WALL STREET, NEW ,i0111C: Feb 16 . 06 T . - T -6m COAL. •'. COAL, WTlERlMlldelllifsed la now prepared to 'stri orders for Lek le, Wyestimag, nankin W sand Bed Ash, tlamberinind and -•Cwa_ Conl—from ;liana Cirank; on the Lehigh Canal: Schuylkill Naven. Port Carbon and -Port •Clinton on the Schuylkill Canal, and nom Amboy..Trenton, Hoboken and Port Rich mond. for shipment Ekat and North: EirOrders aentiwill ?eosin( promptattention. • • .W. J. HAIILAN, Rooms 70 and 71, Trinity Building, New York. June SO, . , _ BROAD TOP. GENERAL -:OFFICE or WI CIELZIOUTID BROAD - TOP - W KETE . Semi-Itiamdmious COALS. No. 104 INAUt . IIT STitEiglrt ialtg,r.ollr#4•llanise6 . ("mom:m=6 Orincats: 26 Trier , Wntini; .361 Trinity . ;Awn Aroik.., . . _BuoAD Top WHITE Allll • SEMIETIMINOIM 'COAL CALDWELL, 110EDON •k' 00 - No. 112 WabiaV r kieet,*idrac r ids: - No: 111 ~abound; gni, fork, 1441 Mtateetast, Botta* Mrs tape' dor 4tuilliroTtidsteletatedooslfrom Wulf inez VWL,COI44I3}IY, by • - • • /"'"' • ()Alt - SLUES 330008, • - Lfo . MOCipor 1:1741,!..41Ar t __L • ir 2110IINTAIPA L •-; • • BLACK 111MATIEL. Allikdeeisla other Ara Oaths at • - WRITE AlfirllMD 4 / 1 81011A18;_.., 10.114 14.1011, 414:1foldAnd rim" ` lif011:611 00034 :WXylta /.seenv 7 j". 7 ,„. ;401LN:''A;; - BoimisaLisq,„ , .. -- - , ' - N - S•neys - 4.. ;,,,. sc,. iiitAlltio 4 • ...A;i.. ow . ' >1 " . rie: *.._. . . VIT.AI:II3ZOICGRAEIT & 0 0.. I Lommesur :SLOCQBT .mattutcoiLi Erbipptfli of other approved gaaiitiee of IhrZM .AHD BBD Ass. COAX 818 Walnut Street, Philadelpbie. ' ' 9 Trlotty_ _Banding, New,York. Cor. of 30.1 by dr, Doane Street 73ceton. . ,Feb. 14. 13 . - - ' 7- • Pier 19 Port Illichnsend. - jOHN C. SCOTT. & SONS, • .111101:68 AND 6111WPIZ2 OP . - .'MAPLE- DALE COAL.. And dealers In other anproved qualities of Whine and }led Ash Anthracite, and Cataberian# • r s idiadelidda, No. 446 Walnut St., Boon OFFICES: No. 4, Grigg Building. • ' • Y., No 149 Bratdoray. Walter. Bros.• - Feb & Co., Agents. J. Douai. ' .M. &Summar. Wil. KiNDIIIOIC. DOVEY, BIII.ELEY di CO., .• • • . .• JOHN J. DOVEY, .SON &. C 0.,. tr. a. nom, Y. a. notamty, WV. moment, a. r.novry) ' Miners and Shippers of the Cciebrgted PRESTON AND .OILBERTON COAL 8, ••• Wharf No, 20, Port Riclasonii OFFICES?: ' PHILADELPHIA—No. 226 Walnut St, Room No. NEW.YORE—Trinity Building, Boom No. 66; H. A. Aechtertrieht, Agent. . • -BOSTON--Sower & Reed. Agents, No. 29 Doane St. WASHINGTON, D. C:-.11. Jones, -Agent. March 16 , 67 _ • 11-- Pier No.. 14. . .. , NEW YORK do - sornritam GOAL Ooh, - . ... . . .BROAD kotrziTArN . tuck BEATS, AND - . SUPERIORkm gm COALS... - 1 28 Exchange , Plaea, New York. . OFFltaso 1 827 Walnut street. Philadelphia. S. •C. Th*lng & C 0.,. A.gta., TT State -, 158 . 4.1. • - . • : St., Boston. VANDIIS]EN, 2 L9cH . RAN • & co., LOCUST MOUNTAIN. IDCUST GAP, WII4.ESILAU LEHIGH, AND OTHDR . WHITE AND.RED'..-ASH COALS, tgintrifor.the mirror the celebrated Georges Greek snalberland Coal, from the Mines of the Con. trolidatkm Coal and Iron Company of Maryland. • . . Richmond, likurrnto Watavas: - 1 7 2 0 21 bet•b r ei:t , Georgetown. f2ollValnut atreet,Philarlelphia. Orrosse: Trinity New York. '• 6 Doss St.,..DostOs. ' • • . • Feb. 11036. -• . • . T. IL BOHOLLERBERGEE AGENT, Miner and Shipper of the Celebrated Black Heath White Ach and rnakedlionn• tahrFree PINK ASH .COAL. P. o. ADDRESS—Porrtwuma ortarrazavut.r, Scrmyt. kill County, Pa. ' April 12, , 62 Litt JAMES ADONNEE, • Miner and Shippbt of the Celebrated LOCUST MOVNTAIN.COLL, Pottsville,' til e hnylkill :CoOsaty, Penns. ; J. M. I" -R O !LINER AND SHIPPER OF THE Centralia. or *.ocust. Mountaio' . 0A.1.4 . rod Office Addreßs, ASHLAND, Schuylkill Molly, Pa., °rem/trails, Columbia Ccaudy. TIE _HILL di rums , COAL. - . WE MITE Air INT ED • • Mesors. 1101111 REL & . HUNTER ' , 2021-2. *Whilst St., Philadri" . • " ' • • • • Our exclusive Agents for the sale oroar coal, along. the line of the fiehaylkill. In the cities of Philadelphia and New York, and in the • Eastern Markets—to whom entailers should be addressed. . • By confirming to prepare our coal in the. VIMY Baer 'stirrer& we hope to retain our old customers and secure new. ones, being prepared to dr' a largely b oasted business this-year- : BILL * HRlft: • Mahanoy•City, Jan. Stet, 1267. • • Feb. 2. VAST FRANKLIN LOR. AI ill It 11 li , Ali VEIN COAL: My Bast Franklin Lorberty_Coal la now Bold min 'Lively by Memo. CALDWffiI., GORDON & Co., who are my soleenta. Partite o p - la g from them, may always depend upon getting a pure article. ' , IN o. llk Walnut St., Phlladelphia, _ ,: minus No. 111 Broadway,' Trinity Fullquip, - New York. _ - - No. 144 Kate Street, , BRE" BIKI Treaumt, Kuehl% PO , .111-" C A N D 5.,.. Foster LEASE.—The Echuylkill Orel CcenTlare I. no prepared to make -lessee on then .1 An Foster T ow _ tunin, Schuylkill County. These' lands are loated on the very beet portion of the Wandler- Ba ski. having over four miles run on the Dirdel. Crosby,L Lealor atul all the veins known in that bean, both above and below - water level. - Favorable leads with an abundance of timber for mining purposes, will now be made to good tenants, on amAlsatian to H.H. BODY, Prat of the Company, NO.B Wail area. NeWilibrk. • • • • June SS; 95.-26. • THOS. HULL: &C 0. ,;: lampsSPAM .110Verit IFI 1 LEGH COAL , • - Yorktown, Carbon .County, Tatum .9199 WALNUT Street, PhiladelplOfai • JEANENTSIVILIE, Lamellae Canty Pa. - ,July 28. '64; • • • 80-1 OFFICE OF' THE BOSTON! ii ItILATIAIWOY COAL: 1:70.; POTTS JOHN . S VILLA, .YelazarT I.4th, 1867.-L.We kave appolOted wmilciop of Pottsville, excladve_lgt for the sale of our Coal from, th e Maharaq L , v4 lowborn all orders slionla be addrease& - Per fad Mahaooy Coal Ca,. " MOWS IitOBERSON, . • • The shove coal 1.1 being _prepared with' the nitrite care with it slew ton dotnestietrade. can with tton dderice,recanunend the coal as helms drat class arti cle. JOHN E.' WYNKOOP. • • Oates next door to Union Hall, Pottsville. Feb 16;'64.• . . - . . . NIANI . JNOTH CONOOLIDATM D • COAL COMPANY. ',- MOMS. BOW IC L, lELLIM NUTT/NO, thmibeenAppoint Sole Agents for tba sale of our cele• lusted LOCUST MOIINTAIN COAL froin our Locust' Mountain oAllery. A. SALMON. Treasurer. March 9,''ol' . - - • 1041 rradersinned ts now prepared to sell ADM' gut: c°sl, DLSAIOND COAL w ffn AL; PI3BBION - COAL' C 0.43, now mined and 'named by Hrenderlth, Doves, Batley & Ce.. SHAIIOSENCOAL, BLACK WA= and others. All orders promptly Attended to.."' DANtlt7; LASES, • .• •. - Offlaiopposite lidos Ifall,lf.thantongo Pottsville; Muth S. 931 . • • 6 ana • - • . COAIGIAIRASEIL.dIte New York, and Riddle Coal Field Rail Road and Coal Cortv =tita. are now prepared to glee 'Leases on their hinds; In ConyiThaham Towne/alp, Columbia Conntac,. the vi.‘ of Now* Carmel, .ebleh. have been tally' derekrped Wrecent 'awnings. Lames whi re- WIWI to make sR the neeeseaw improvenwntx Applientions will be oxelved at the office of the COW pany.No. 1126:WilantAL. IldlatiolAWorpolheir Sd sinew, W. R.Aegalsiltuasell's .ftlidhig,, Pottsville Pc.;rartare Rill infontation an be obtatned.: JOHN'R. - DIEET , M, • - MANUIPIUMIER OP" - ' 'OCIAL . BONIER • - 04_11ipiLiii ! ssula 4 Ml APIP*Teil **leo, Jai momisood who, jiisinetkis Screen Nsittsc. tom; latrine - Cod Arslqurr ob, nonnhatarnst anirirr .oww.r -Patented Arne sisrsi:JurorlierWM_ 112017 TM YISNOW - X Was musts rrs oispix* sizstapsi t szvt- MI: MT WORSOUT, 4 2 • • Beceppesitallysolidte o ,-. ontronsoce o f the ppm- . iwilistethert• so Morally bestowed los . Farm 410ria3a.fiett • Tim. 4. obi--N-t! sarrovthrmi PA.. DI E Elif: di . ORl.` IV;;.- PATEIft SLATE -PICKER. . __ tbioughthe basket. - It Ili in* ` Ate i - 'aid tiitswe staff the- .s-idik lieriKt =Lao lx-- L'.!..r li f- 1 .. 1 -71 .„,„ __l .- -: •F 1 V1L,7,1 ..4 - ' I :Waft A 4. 1. , 0z 1 / 4010 , 4 1414r, i ri 0 , ban ~,,..,:,.., .„.. ....m...... . ( ~ , ik #lllllltili. «....z.l , ' «4 •4:4' .- "V"'" - Y , '-• , :',: z4: ;' , 4:14. ~ : v ,,- «,-4. 'yr7«rt.:44,Po, - : , .. , ..L-d., &-zt a I+,o-..- - _ 1 -': -1 4 •i , : f41, -- 4.',. .' wo - t 4 . ;; T ' ir ... ' 41'1411147 . 4 . : : 4 -':::'''''!.."«V r«.• A- , ' % MEM= I . olteafatra l tO_Orlithelkoomil, of die Bilsllkrrikildig..llollo4lle Can** 11f, 11 , 0 , 111 4 11111 , iglnVlT'stleelmtkuto ourkandsaud. added all NaarOs our wit sail. pkuurear-DR. MUM SCHUYLKILL CO. LEHIGH. sAirtjal i p,xy', MORNING MA Ron. .23, as 4. , , IEn:XL . E. ♦DD:47N To Coal Dealers, Gas COS, &O. THE undersigned hating seteeneded.' *raid Warren in the sole manursetare of Adam pdelunted Patent Self-Aunping f Hoisting Scoop Buckets, Anat. Ho.. • • Ito* 'Cars . •• - • Iron ;Box I A) Wheelbarrows, . .' • Are prepared to fill all eiders with , promptneas and 7=—Being the sole owners of the Patent Right for' the Self-Dam ping, Hoisting, Scoop 'Becket and Dock Block, we caution all persons against manufactu ring or pusing, the same fromany except ourselves, or our agents,- as we will prosecute to the utmost limit any infringement on the Letters Patent.. . • MORI; WARREN, Reauling.Pa.- Atrgost 9i6,. 81-ly FEAT IMPROVREIENT . COAT; EICIMIM. The nndensigned are now . _prepared tomazintadare, at thole shop, In M.Lnerwrllle, all kinds of SORBENB tot sawaing' ensi, of the improved manutatante, patented to Ain& Lanbeasteln, 4th Pounsau. 1662. , I l i e r e ..- -q.--: ea NAV \Ma ZINN MEI WEE • MEE lIIELM MEN WEL ANIS 'Wit. Agar . f3creena manufactured by tide Pnxmas, are more au mble; malutaln'thelr fonn better, and are furnished as Cheap as any to be bad In the County. They are.made, of square Iron, In such shape as to prevent the, oal" sliding from ono size to the other be fore Is thorotighly alamted,.thue preporlng It better than Can be done by cast Iron or wire screens. • - The manufacturers urgently request all Operators wanting Screens, toe those new.patent Screen at their shop, or .at Work at the Mammoth Vein Col liery of George S. RePplier, near St. Clair, where they have beeriin use for some time. By poseirssing screens made under this Patent, lift gation,or any trouble as to patent rights will be avoided. - All work done with promntness anddisnatch. • ' • J. & Minersvule. June . 28-tf COAL .LEASES*OIIrBA.I.E. “The Black 'Diamond Cent and 'lron Company? , will. receive pro until the 15th day of March next, for the of their two Coal Leases and all the personal property belonging to tbe -Company the Collieriea are now ready for work. These leases are located at Locirt .Grap, Nortlama berland Conety, Pa., and have seven years to run, at a :royalty of 25 and 30 Cents per . ton • Ibrall sizes above Chestnut, and ten cents per ton for that size: . Outs colliery is worked' by slope,, the other above water level, Payment will be *received either hi cash,'or put cash and balance not to' exceed. four•fifths •of the entire purchase Money, in the stock, of the Company at par. Each proposal must state whether payment is in tended. in cash or stock. or all cash. The Company reserve'. tlie right to reject all Irmo, We not sinifactory to thew. • ' - • Per _particulars -apply to WM. R. MARSHALL, Shamokin, or to the Office - of the Company at Phila del,Fhla ' •J. 8.• 1 0.1.7DU5.01, President. . . IU .01.,A9118 C01.1.1111311Y, fee - Weesse. —The executors of . James Dundee, dee& and the executors of Wm. Ricluinison, deed, infector lease the Peaked Mountain. Colliery on the -•"Catliailne Grob'. tract, situate in Poster Township, Schuylkill' County, .Perna.'. The lease will' rant the - right ha mine on the north . : ,dips of the "Big Orchard." 'Primrose," "Holmes. a "Crosby or . Mammoth,'! "Bitidmom. , and "Bulk Roulade" Veins. Also, the tight tO • .s.blisb a nets colliary on the basin between the peaked Motes tain and Mine Hill, and work all the veins of the basin on both dips.-aind Ifitewb3e all, coal above waterier' on the adjacent lands of the For Improvement Com- Ws% betwear certain points: • •The Peaked Mountain Colitery -is worked . by two shafts, and the Improve ments, consisttog of hoisting engines, new large Cor nish engine, vamps. miner s' houses, Ac., "&e... ac.,' are all in excellent ccuadition. This meet desirable proper ty will be leased on libend terms: Further informs'. natilind exhibits of niar" 11117.0 I; - wlir be given to responsible mrtia on application to TIM Elkracm. TORI3OP JAMES DI7NDAn OR WM. RICLEABDSONi (00 Prune streDELPHIA, or to , _ lip, Agent s Pottavilie, - Jan. 19, '66 VERT: DEIItiRAIII,E COME- ESTATE T FOR SALE.. . • . - -, . • - Thempeetece of James Dundee. Deceased , and the trecutors of William. Richardson; ' deceased, will sell , all that valuable tract of coal land known as the ' _ "Catherine Groh" Trutt. I ___. Mien An Cass'and Feder aownships, licimylkUl County, Pennsylvania. This tract contains 424' acres,' ahnost all of which 'mil underlaidd with proven seams of coal. The tract three distinct basins on It, Ms :—The Bret, Or Southern Begn, between the Mine Bill; and Peaked. Mountain ; the Middle or Great Thisin, between theltaked Motto' 'fain and Broad Mountain; and thelarerted or Jugular Balla owthe Broad • - .lll.ountele: :., The - course. of the veins avenge about MO lards. • _ . ' • The .Middle Basin contains. ALL the • known mini Ann the "Big Orchard , . down to the ilret in the series arthaNZlOfft l iilie4 There are now two first class ,collieries on the= Ms t The "GlenCarten"—undm• law which *lobar, -1871-and . . -The _Peaked Idonitain.^-the lease of villkharpired istof. Tannary,, - 2107, - and Which ii now untenanted. • . _Thereto ample -4:opacity -for e - third colliery in the Fitstorßouthem Basta, elawenp. arathentfor-yeera,would.be above waterless:l. The Ens I la, whkii wilibe baldish* the lease; con. 't. tone' 'new, ' lergs, *medal' Cornish . Pumping aw home _ power: - bunk by -kip V,astine of :with*** apt/u euaaw, in complete prd• . er mr¢ tiftY,banwPDWet cud °MY 11 217 3 = ' ~, .... • tairturau il tegneik.st'• are lame Stone tkore sail - hre - llifigHotusa - R, eattent,fituillaSlMll , roM.9 l 4 ol v i_ a iNur Besideinde eigatate *e, the 7 thaetshilled wilfiteil along withitthe 'by this estate to Mine coat-above "latter , ,on • thtfadjetitiM lands or the lkirest=vememi, hetwaht.tottl* For infotmatkm, Puttee anninothilth& I purchase,w here arthitilddla MP at the race ot the er. idgued, they-may examine tbe Wm-tom Ma* nod Ja reanserst =f-ttuatract.,,peterme WIT -') - ' • - -. .1- - ..nenitulirriN . • , ' :11.1CHAND filfirfainnfr. ; .. • of James DREAM. Loorma. 400 Piarte tito '4s*- a • - : „ Atia.T o posootwa stom - - -.2kwalp.mools.aus i ntlr e nediw MILIN - • • . . Nolat i o.. Ptitlstillek".4 lablitirogiti° l4 "argamt t°' Mdblio 'ilioarreler mai ditiond to' any Salm ado golligair, • -,- • pqr 901111116- j141101:hk•_-: =MEM SCH.II,YLKIIit =SEEM - ItAintOADS': MIME dr, 84111,11 wil.ssuLir. !Lt. ClitaiageVeif Ihlsatienif:Patalexasten On and- atter4annso. 1; 1667. PaSsenger Trains wig lefty eSCII¢J*III:IISV ag MEWS. At 6.15 A- - m f , and. 12.20 FOR GimitrCAßßO'hi • Retuning: will leave" Glen Carbon at - 1".40 and At 1.40 M.. - commenting at. Schuylkill Haven with:morning and .rnetnoon Passenger Trains , ' for Philadelphia. — . Passenger Train. between Ashland and Locust Gap . Janction. ampecting - with stage to and from Shamokin. Leave Locust Gap Junction at 10230 A. M. Leave Asblan4 at:2.45 P.' M. • - Connecting with Passenger Trains on 14; MLR,_ R. to andfrom Pollayille, at which point 'eonneetioluT will be made with &anion Phil ada. and Reading H. R.. .. • • • WM: H. HINES, Engineer & Supt. 12th, !GT.. • 24f • Senviftalff.l4ANl) SUSQUEHANNA; 11.411:11.0AD...Clexuage of Mono. ozl and after N0v.127,,1905. Pa -Wager Trains will leave Pottsville daily. Certain Sandap) at 0.45 A. M for Anbum,linegrove and - Harrisburg, and at 1 P M for Auburn; Pinegrove andTremont.., ' Paraehllen 3 11: 451 CM train from. Pottsville will ar rive at Harristmig.viaTinegrove "at 11.30 A M in time to connect with trains _going east or. wei3t 013 Penna.; Cumberland " . ,Northern Central and Lebanon Valley Illellvta o , - The 1.00 PM train from Pottsville will- connect. at Auburn with up morning train trout Philadelphia, leav ing Auburn at 1.30 PM for Pmegrove, and'arrhiee at Tremont at LBO PM. Will leave Tremont for Pine grweat 6.00 PM. connectlog there with -toe .P M train from Harrisburg , and returning to Tremont at T.oo' : Returning will leave Harrisburg. at 4.00 P M,.connecting at nnegrove at 11:35•P M. with train for Turnout, and at Auburn with , up Passenger nein for Pottsville., Passenger Train will leave Tremont at 7.00 A M. connecting at Pinegrove with tram to Har risburg. at Auburn with down morning Paarenger Train from Pottsville to . Philadelphia , and arriving at Pottsville at 9.20 A. M. • . ' . •Fire. from Pcitteville—tejliirrisbnri. . For tleketa or other informaton a ply to' W Agt.,. at Pottsville. 11. 11.. TRACY, Supt. • Feb I. ,6G Lllllll VAT:I;EX RAILROAD.:OII7. - • Whater'' TRAINS ON THE LEHIOR b -VALLRY RAILROAD ON AND AFTER MONDAY, November loth. 18Ger, 'WM inn in connection with the eeveral reads running lo Wilkesibarre,yew.Yorkhnd Philadelphia, as followe: DOWN TRAINS. b .: • - c 5.. 4 . • .. • S.no 7 - .30 , • El".no 2:13 . 4.3010.57 4.25 , 11.00 12.07 5.55 12.45 12.45 0.11 12:20 0.15 12.55 .., 1.15 .0.44 12.55 '6.45 1.30 , 9.20 2.35 8.45 4.40 10.511 4.44 10.45 5.00 'Past Lfrie, daily. • tCinelnnstl Express. UP TRAINS. &TITIONS. • Leave • - Wllkesbarre.:. Mount Carmel Mahan oy City. Manch Chnnit. Allentown.... Bethlehem heir York.. • ErrAnowe '18• teave Z la; New York. 0.80 12.00 . 4.00 9.00 8.00 5.00 Phlladelva 7.30 • 5.T5 Easton:.... 9.47 3.9.5 7.40 11 11.05 8.50 Bethlehem. 10.20' 4.00 8,13 12.84 11_40. 0..25 Allentown.. 10.37 4.15 8.30 12.3: 11v.0 0.05 • - .M. Chuzik:.l.2.l6 5:50 10.00 • . 0.30 116 , 1203 , Cify 0.02 7.45 • . •Mt. Carmel. • • .9.00 , Wllkeablre 3.92 - B'4B . "Fast Line. tWestern Expreis, duly; lllarrlsburg Way Train. Valern. - Aeeom. from Mauch tanu.c. CO liNECTIONS crxximat:K. B. or NEW Je.r.s.sv . . . • AM Up and Down •tmins connect at ElOtnn with the trains of the Central Railroad of New Jersey to and from New York. ': . . Down, trains • Nos.l. - 5 -and T. rind rip trains Noa. 2 eonnect at 'Bethlehem • with trains for Philadel phla: Trains from Philadelphia connect at Bethlehem with down train No. 7 . , and with no trains Nos. 8 & 16. Down trellis Nos. laud C. and up trains No 2,4, 6, ilnd 12, connect at Allentown with .trains for Rending add llnrrishurg. Trains from lliirrehnig and Rending connect at Allentown' with all thorn train.,. Down trains'Nos. 1, 3 and 5 connect at Plillilpabary, ,. with trains for Philadelphia. Trains from Philadelphia connect at Phillipsburg ,with trains Non. 2,10 and 12, and trains from Belvidere concoct, with up traits NOB. 0 and S. •-• ' , . D o wh train No; 7. and up train No. Q conneetnt tiltfakake Junction with train= of the Culawisea. R. R. =I Down triune Nos. 5 and 7, and nn train No. 9, con- Pact. . AND RVSQUiIIANNA D.lNlren: . Down' traitta -Nes. Ii and 7, and up trains Nos, 6 n' connect at White. Haven with trains of * a the Lehigh and Snaquehanna Railroad to Anti from Wilkesharre4 without change of cars between Wilkeqtarre and New York, nhange of. cars between Wilkeshane and Philadelphia on up train No. 8 and down train No. 5. . • . ROBERT 11. SAYRE. • • SuPerintendent and Eneineer L. - 11. 9 TANLEY GOODWIN, Atts't 'gent] Supt. ' " . • May 21, '66.23 . ruLADELPIIIA & REA MING Bummer Arrangement of Passenger Trains, 11IAI', 23. i 66 , • Leave Pottsville at 7.00 and 5.45, A.• M., and 2.45. P. M.; =lying in Philadelphia at 1.00 and 4.40 and 7.05, P. M. • • Leave Phlladeliplda ;it -8 00, A. M.,10..45, noon. and 3.30, P. M. arriving at Pottevitio at •12.t5i, noon, 7.35 and 8.30, P: M. . • _ . The 7.00 and 8.45, A. M., and 2,45; P. M.,.down, and 8.00, A. M., up Trains. Connect nt Rending fur Allen town, Easton, New .York, Lehnnou, Harrisburg, Ban more,• and the West.: • The 12.415 and 3.30,1'. M., oji.Tralns, connect onlk for Lebanon.Martiabufg, and %rah Heading and . Columbia Railroad.. • • . • '- •.- • 'On Sunclay.leave 'ottsville at s.oe, A. M., and ?Ha , delphta at 3.16, P. M. ' Aline 11111 Rail Rona - - lotit Trains leave Alinerscitle at 5.10,A.. M. 4 and • Glen Carbon at 1.40,P.111., connecting at. Schuylkill Haven with;B.4B; A. L. and 2:45, P. IL Trains for Philadelphia. lap _Trains leave Schuylkill Haven at 7.25, A. M., and 12.20, noon, cemnecting with too, A. it., Train from Pottsville; and 8.00, A. H., front Philti delplua. Leave Locnst Gap 10.30. A. 31., and Ashland. 2.45,..P. ISL, connecting: with 2.4 r, P. H.. Train for Phil adelphia, arid. 8.00, A. IL, Train fur.. Pottsville. - No . . . Schuylkill and Sitatjuchnnvin R. 'The 7.00, A. M., 'find 6.00. P. M., Trains from Trci- Mont, and 4.00, P. IL from 11.sri . isliunt, , connect at. An burn with 8.45, A-51; Tmin for Philadelphia; and 12.45, noon, Train for Pottsville.- • ' ' r • ' The TAO. A. M., and 1.50. Trains from Auburn 'connect with 6.45, A. M.. and 1.00, P. M., Trains from Poi • NoSunday Trains. . . Mellnyl. Valley:and Mountain ,Link R. B. Leave Pottsville at 7.00 and 11.30, A. M.., and 7:15, 1?, M. Leave Tamanna at 7 . ..?,5, A. M., and I.4o'and 4.15.. P. M. SLitidays: leave Tamaqua • at. 5.45, A. M., tit@ '.",)tarille at 2.00, -pig.. . - • ' - • . . . . .. . . NI. and B. Itlt. wed M• ITIUB• IL • The 6.00 and 11.90, A. 81., -Trains from Ashlanct con nect at Mt. Carbon, with 8.45, A M., and 2.45, P. 'M. 'Trains for Philadelphia • - -* - '. ' The 9.45, A. M., and 1.00 and 9.:4, P.M., Traino from Tomaqua, -connect atlft. Carbon with*7.oo, A.ll. ftom Pottsville ; at Port *Clinton with 8. 0 0, - A. M.. up Train. frolic PhiladelPhia...and at Mt. Carbon with 3.80, P.M.; ltp Train from Philadelphia. A mixed .Ptt.Menger and Freight Train leaves Ashland at 1.06, P. M.,' for Tama . - qua. Sundays : Lenin Ashland 7.00, A. M., and Tama qua 8.15, P. M. . , Little • .The 11.40, A. M,. Tien from Port Clinton, and 2115, P. M., Train from Tamuia. connect with 8.00, A. M.. Train from' Philadelphia, and 2.45, M., Train fcir Philadelphia On Sundays: Least .Tamagna at 7.30 A. ht., and Port Clinton at 7.00 P. AL • . • —The 8.45, A.-M., dOwn Train. to Reading, stops at all stations between Pottsville and Reading. The . 8,80, P. M., bp Traln from Philadelphia, stops only at principal stations.- . . •• • - . . - COMMUTATION TICKETS;. With 26 coupons attached, between any points desiroil-,, at 45 per cent. discount. 9. 4S,2 4 9L ) H2tf ee TISKETS,' • •• " flood ' , Pints, for' Famil4a and Business Firsroi; at $l2 .• ' - • ''• '• ...§epsonTickets brAyreen all points it redticed rates. Bohoillseagin7Tioket9 ono:third lows. - • •-; BO lbs. of baggage allowed cub Pas. gi nger. •• xetairsioli-Ticketsi Iron Philadelphia to Pais vine and back, go9d for Saturday, Sunday and.Nfonday,- $4 35 each: . •G. Genera Supe rintendent: ". June 2, .66 AMERICAN - ,CILUN CABLE WORKB. .rwnerrielts,ricerirszias IN Tut Dustsrse.—, ems) , • i‹mmq - 3Dizig.Tc; CABLE; CILLik 1C COIL MINE SLOP . E. CHIINS, Tnmton, N. J. . . Chains of every description made to order at the shortestnotlces and all Cable, Crane and Coal Mine Slope Chains, warranted-to stand the Government Test, P. a.-4111 parties purchasing Chains are, respectfully tatted to see it tested. fctpr 28,'66) March 2, '62-2!IY . . , ..}l-..P:LROTHWELL:Miuing • , . and CiiirtEngin ear and Metallarglat PA; Having had a laniisi Teael - tealexperience in' vaiOrdi pmts of Europe and this eountiy prePered to exslor-. and . report oar all kinds of mineral property, super intend •to opening . of mines • and estahlishmenti of smelting and other metallurgical works; assay orv., kept. for the isaleof W. •P. Henley's ! • STRELAINDAWIRE igoN ROPE , -.- Sigottiiiict - Tel4fitpli renting Strad ,— -- .Third Mee-Rops ark tall lighter thanirotglopes, °l..ltuladreoigttrioset‘ONE..T.LUßH LESS. and are I[llll4l more ifunib . ?Tent fcr Pennsylvania ( except loroll wells) for — eor • - • • NlPriteripiiirCEßlN . Ic ; POT Viettlig.' Attention Is invited to the west eeon oa use of Ahistlasting oil. ..Pultin atractions even.% lie use, • Hr. R- will take °aEtrtieth for an kinds rock u work at low prices. •- ' - Martha; - . • • 9-- • • . & 00 AKERIOANAILLVANIZINq 1 1 7.08163;.' :l k a- 1 g 9 2 *. 1 .04 41 C 1111*""4 Sg4.lllll4llda.' ioGeivanizt; kinds " 4 9 / !°; irca 4l 4 2 uTtestAuttu u 80. 1 4.rxr ' t ; :- ban. • We keeiktetirtantly oithebl beet _Bloom Auk Pub:. Ailed. Rog ken, all Nutt. ; Seiko, Nails, anditivete. Beat WreaAt ;roe WeldPailtes , .'Fleet bed piomet deliver,. - 43ltetteratteettett lea le-the . hangs/Ong oritie - i bun and Wet bawler In tad outside 'sautes " the • TINMEINEV — ABIL , 4IAB= e„-.4.7vgium IN A , 4 - calsitalp MODE! 1 4,VIEffmat? toiatiiiiefi at.theehaea oLROSIMEEIBM &;131.i: sad GEORG)" BEEN= Centre 011)611111: ''',1 111 1 1 Ar1it1 108 0 1 .4414, 1 044 -43 Man* • " • MISCELLANEOUS. .S - P . :ET:R . :7 . B PORTI:.:.GRA:P.E-':•.:WINF,..! PURE AND. FOUR YEARS of For, theCommunlon Table 'anti Family' Fs& PRESCRIBRD BY PHYSICIAXS FOR - Females, Ure.4kly T4O, Great .Remeay for Kidney Affections 13.1 - IEttIIIA,TISM, .SES. AND ALL CD[liON EXCIELT.ENT .171 n 1:41 . TEMALES I INeri , . 1i:oily:at: this Beason should use- • Speer's Per! Grape Wine, . . • brated-In' Europe :for its' medicinal and beneficial qua e.42.l4,rbly:•.esteemed by eminent physicians,' usedl.l aroFearr and AmericeA hospitals. and by some, o beat families in Europe and America. - AS. A. TONIC--It bas no equal, causing an appetite and building.up the system, being_ entirely a pure wine pf a most valuable grape; ,AS A IDIIIII.ETIC-4t !mimes a healthy action of the 411718' kidneys and 'Urinary organs: very beneficial in gutttand'rhenmatic affections. • ' Speer's Port Grape Wine is a pure article from the Mice of the Port Grupe, pos sessing medicinal properties superior to any other wine In use, and an excellent article for all walk and debilL -Wad persons, and the aged and infirm, improving the appeilteiand benefiting ladles and children. Try it mice, and yon will not be deceiied. • brße sure the signature of ALFRED SPEER la Overthe cork of each bottle.- ' . —Sold* by D. Saylor, Pottsville'; Shindel.A.Bond, Ta maqua Hertnany Mahanoy City; Lawrence & Brown, Mineraville ; H. N. Core, Schuylkill Raven ; IL B. Davis, St. Clair, and by all first close aril . els, who also sell the CASTELLA. PORT BANDY a choice old article, imported only by 20; SpFor,. dVect from the, Valley of Oporto; • . • - - - • Trade supplied by wholesale dieWsts In New Yoik and Philadelphia, and by A. SPEER, at his Vineyard In New Jersey. - PRINCIPAL OFFICE-208 Broadivan.N. Y. May 14, .66 LE IRIBIERS, of Pottsville, Penna., .111.• dealer in 'MUSIC, 'MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, PULNOS„ 'MELODEONS, ,ORGANS, Inising.beeo appointed sole agent for the celebrated Inauso'n • dfc litarrilinia Cabinet Orgarta,: . In the .County Of Schuylkill, would respectinlly an nounce to the musical community that he can furnish these-unequalled favorite Cabinet Organs, In all styles and size, at manufacturers' prices. The quality and volunfe of tone, with the power of expression in these. organs, is universally admirial and praised, while their purtabilitrand.beautifulnuish make them the moat el egant parlor ornament. ETery Family Should gaye:One. TEM CABINET ORGANS are - adai)ted 4.6 FAMI LIES, CHURCHES AND SCHOOLS. They ray iteprice front $llO to $6OO each. • 11r - Exery InmtrircuentAlrtirranted. Alia, Agent for Maeale of . the math admired 1,7,11) . Melodeons . and Harmonitarr.prgans . , • for the Ceimileit of Schnylltill,. NOrthumberland and Lebanon, which • instrii.r.)..lv -aio• titrii"CriZtV*; , s l— . They pofsess a sweetness and fullness of .has received the united - commendation of the mnsical' profession, and induced an almeaLunprecedented sale. Purchasers are rmpectfully invited to call and exam- . `lnc for themselves. All communications and. orders ' will be punctually answered or filled, and every infm-' =Olenin relation to them gladly given. • . • ' Store and Ware Rooms, at the Jewelry Store on Cen tro street; four doors from: 34aumbuige .street;-Potts- VOLT.77.N. • MIMES NCOLLTEN ' WOL'TJEN, :BROTHERS, • . SEGARS AND CLAY PIPES - . DZALERIS Leif and ManaratinredTobacco; 221 NORTH THIRD ST:, B ETWERN EACH'AND wag, • ' AFFEICTE - 13.! • SUFFER NO MORE ! When by.the use ofDR. JOINVULE'S ELIXIR you can be eared permanently, and statriding cost.' The astonishing success which has attended this in valuable medicine for Physicahmd Nervous Weakness, Genera Debility and Prostration, loss of Muscular Energy; Inipotency, 'or Auy of the consequence of youthful indiscretion, renders it the most valuable pre paratioe ever . di...overed... •. . : • - . t'it will remove nit nerveut, affections, don: salon, ex citement. iurnpacity to study or business, loss Of mem cry, confusion, thoughts of self-destruction, fears Of. Insanity, &c. It will restore the appetite, renew the health of those who have destroyed it .by sensual ex •cess or evil practices. - • . • Young:Men,' be humbugged neimore by %black Doc tors,' and Ignorant practitioners; but send. without de- lay for the Elixir, and be. aVonce restored to health and happiness.% -A Perfect Care is guaranteed inevery instance. price;- . sl; or four bottles to one address, $B. . One bottle is sufficient to effect a cumin all ordinary ALSO, DR: JOINVILLE'S SPECIFIC PILLS, for the speedy and permanent cure of Gonorrhea, Gleet, Bre- - thral discharges,' Gravel, Stricture, and all affections of the Kidneys and Bladder. • Cures effected in Cairn one t, five days. They are prepared from =• vegetable ex- • tracts that are harmless on the system, andisever nau seate the stomach or- impregnate.: the breath,— No cluingeof diet Is necessary -while tering them,. nor does their action in any mannerinterfcre with business pun, Price, Slper box. . • Either of the above mentioned articles will heeerie to'anyaddreas, closely sealed, ancrpost-paid„ 4=ll or express, on receipt of price. Address all orders to ; - • ' ' BERGER,SIMITS & Co.,,Chemists, • ; Feb. 9; .6't 283 River st.; Troy.N: -- REPAICAI'OR Throw away yertr filsh Mises. sirritetes;yoisWig, 4 Destinethie of comfort ,' and not worth's ng - : .Come aged, mac yonthral, come ugly sna (airs. • 1 . And !toles Sn'ytinr bwn Iszartailt,fialt. • *. • BE . P..laidAro* OAPTELI. For .reattning hifr upon bald heads (from . whatever m cause ifmay hav e fallen out) end - forcing. a growth of hair upon the - face; it has 'no equal.- 'lt will for the beard to grotrepterthe.smoothertface in from &et° 'eight Weekktar,bair upon bald heeds in -from torn t.o three months. A few igridant prattitioners "have la serte4 that this nOWn,, ,, that -will force or hasten the growth of the hair orbeerd: 'Their assertions are ' false, as thourazadir of living- witnesses(from their own' wept:dente) cartheariritnese:' noutyWill say, how ammo to di t . the genuine from the eintrionst It certainly is dliticultmt nine.tentlia of the different prations advertised for the ifs-frail beard are Inc ti.t..worthless,.. and you may: have already "-thrown 1 4 11 9 /et* arnoutte . inocitase 'Po each We Would say; trjr.the Reparitior .. 1;14 i 1111 t utilised you nothing unless it Thlly coolest:to toeur repreoentatiorw, 'My= dregghit dOes not keep it, Its ode , dollar 'and we will forward._ it lost-paid; together iwith'- Se: celitsfer#te'money, which *lll be retnnted_youon _entire' satisfaction le not given. ; • Address, , Wilt CLARK &Co.; Otenaleter, • , • .15:O, ;, West Fayette , ist . ;': Syracuse, N. Ys "-- ' . . . • • • TWICLIfit: Yeats multi stlorhAifpruved•Dr; Edwattps, COUG 11 I ..TIMIVII4 Chen, ' and NuPtiok Cough Syrup! most ,101Ccen; ' 'rat 'Medicine Lti goe fat CoWL -Coughs, noisr" Astilltaaf, v o i .tluthoutoggrouthlthe Whoop_ Li °Li 111 1' Ing•OaUgh. Atalmlilo.l4l , by, alt. pnlggish!luol Mo41;fO. h sal. -Trice So cents." . Jai 09, ..66_83.1•. r. . rSSTAMT .5,, lALI and 1111411 1 1ABF.BOOk*Orr, 4014'914111t.'Tw bar , .1 - '• • IWritteirfoi the Maur Jimitial:l _ MEMORY'S WM:ME GALLER Y i3weet, Minnie Grey.sitting In Me twilight, .Thlnking ofpicturee on momorrs . • . Teavettingall elr e. 'till the silvery moonlight • - ' Iles all around, and the night dew falls. • • Thinking of days le herloYetuk lumpy childhood. • When care was unknown, and life a happy. dream ,When - she frolicked all day lathe dark, geen wild-wood '. watched her, litee - boatas it floated on the stream. Ttie niciare. fades out; giving. nlate to mother " Of nee end-careless girlhood. and schoolmates dear: The watchful tender care of a loving mother. Calming every grief road wiping every tear. - • To.niebt She sees a green mound flooded vrithrepanlight • ,And the drooping, willow branches slowly wave As they-did:years ago, when the calm, • bright sunlight Mocked her deep grief at that mothe.os grave. ..- . . Now memory paints for heranother twilight, When one stood by her side Mutant* pride. Wa dark eyes beaming with a tender lovelight. Down into hers—hispromised beide. . Ile stoops to pluck wild noes by the river, Twining beauteous wreaths , for his queen so fair. -And they wander on, the shore still the moonbeams On the rippling waves of her golden hair. • _ . . The roses are bkamlng as sweetly as ever, ' lint the-garlands he twined her are withered and ,And the billows will mean their sad regainni forever; , As he ewes fathonasdeep on the ocean's bed. The farewell half-whispered,. half sobbed which was Tbat summer:night ;ieith the old oak tree. • , Seems like a knell to a heart now broken • With grief for her love moatit the sounding sea. -Lsnasokr, Pa. .• „ • Alma. And Invalids. .1. 4 ..HI..PAOSNIORE,'III. 8..' Editor. 9N the. 24th day of February Misses Couch and Streeper left Pottsville for the scene of their labors in the South. After a few days' travel. they arrived at illtirfreesboro, Tenn., where they are now pleasantly-located teach ing freedmen. We expect in our next issue to be able to lay before our readers a full ac.• count of their school. • • EDITOR'S TABLE.—We have received from the enterprising house Of A. S. Barnes & Co., 111 and 113 Williams street, New York, "The Bible Reader," by William B. Fowie. It is a selection of reading lessons fion;x the Holy Scriptures, intended for the use of schools and families. From rather a careful exami nation of the work we feel justified in hearti ly recominending it to teachers: From the same house we have also received the Illus trated Educational Bulletin. It is issued quarterly, at- 10 cents per annum, in advance. It contains much valuable matter. The Pennsylvania School Journal comes to us as usual, with, its 'pages filled with inter esting and instructive information. We thank friend. Burrowes for the compliment he pays us, and shall in the future as hithe past, try to do.all we can to increase the interest in the pablicschools of our County. MR. EDITOR :--I notice in your last issue the following : "Row can teachers secure the et, operation of parents ?'.' I would ask per mission through your„column of making a few suggestions. I thlnir the best way of se curing-the aid of 'parents Irby calling to see them, and Informing them how their children are, getting along. It may not be a part of the teacher's duty to do so; but I candidly think no 'one ought to attempt to take charge Of a school who is not willing to visit the pa rents. It - may require some sacrifice of ease. But is not the true teacher like the -minister of the gospel—called on - constantly to make sacrifices? Again, we know some teachers enjoy, themselves-very mueb in visiting the patrons,. and exercise a very good iofluence upon the home circle. Some teachers urge. that they may not be cordially received —: - Now, I can scarcely believe that there is a parent in Schuylkill. County who would not gladly welcome the teacher of his children.. Speaking for. myself, I really enjoy a visit from my children's teacher. Will not some of the parents respond ? Teachers and pa rents, let us hear froth you. Don't allow such questions to pass over in silence. Yours, PARENT. , - - .., • . . A Pedagit iroir Farewell . Addreso to /tie Coatillatentor.- • I take for granted theie4,hings : that all of us believe that a is worth - fa:ore than an animal; that a parent's love for thik — c-hil&is nothing to laugh at ; that money and trouble expended on the elevation 'of his sons and' daughters is a safe investment, sure to return ai the years, pass, bigger and ' bigger divi dends. For when we see a pippin and a crab apple, clusters worth fifty cents a pound and wild grapes that only foxes: can eat;:or when we-have a vagabond and statesman ; we can see what the world is worth with ed ucation, and what it is worth without. : The word, "Education," grew up on the shores of the: Mediterranean sea, ablut twenty-five hundred years ago, and until it was so hackneyed that it became insignific— ant, signified fi leading forth. Many have turned this word upside down, and make it mean,a - putting in instead of a drawing oin; deeming the teacher a sort of treyphon, made' of some cheap Metal - for pouring diluted things into the young mind, as molasses into a keg. One hates to.compare a youthful eoul to a keg; rather to a flower, (naming eduration, development) and the' teacher to the superintendent of a botanical garden, watching over-plants of every zone, allotting as healthful, moisture, dryness, 'Sunshine and 'shadow. ' , There are two sorts of schools, public and - private;. no more opposing each other. than 1 the sun and Mobil ate rivals to their shining. I Private schools a child may have ; public schools a community must have. To bemire; some communities do without them. The Apaches, I have heard, "do without" public, schools, and in the Fejee Islands, where they fricassee one another, theA"do without" pub, lic Schools ; yet be it likewise observed, that these eccentric people contrive' to do without colleges also. . • Now a public school - belongs to every chi-. zen. He can say: "I own horses, acres of ground, antpersonal property ; and I owner' interest in the public school. I have Relped to buy good desks for .my schools, I have subscribed.for a library, and my agents in the Matter, the truees must manage things to silt - me, or I small. vote against them at, the next election:ne who should let .a farm to a bad tenant, and coming and seeing the pro perty gibing to waste, should say, !the - fellow is so bad a tenant that Illabandon the farm," no doubt woald be a fool, whose fit residen.ce is Stockton. • Suppose-Mr. A's childrea, next month after my successor has been installed, shall 'go home,: crying that the new teacher is awful; that he can't read ; that he cut off Uriah Btlk's bead, and roasted poor Mary Gummidge in the stove! Shall Mr. A. for sake his possessions in the school: or shall he dismiss this ferocious teacher,? . This is a de cisive advantage ; if you get a bad teacher, you' can get rid of him ; ,but no teacher of a private school' stipulates to 'go off in three months, if such is the public will. - More likely he is to lie, Et ponderous Incubus on the general stomach, until starvation' drives them elsewhere:; • , : ' : •-- It has seemed unaccountable to me,. that 1 the school house Is not the finest building in the neighhorhood. 'lt is - the place Where. your sons and daughters.. pass the most of their time, and as you think it expedient, to fit up your houses with comforti, it is strange that the school house is so often a shanty - rather than a mansion: - I dcrnot hope that it will ever. betas attractive as a play ,ground (itself a great help to educating) simply, be; -- cause anything that must be, done regularly and with precision, soon becoinesirksome-to a . - boy whose Impulse la to do nothing contiri nously, _ as 'a butterfly wants a garden full of. I of,bushes to: flatterthrough. Some persons, when they. take pills, - .try So bide the , bad taste with a pickle; and for a like reason,. probably, the true idea of. a sciteol .hottiet; le thst.it must be a pleasanter place - than, the child's home, te - connterbalance the repelling influence which duties - day:after day, are apt • • L The teachv;must be a man that John , can respect; alnan whom he - cannot but see. —and boys ..are lynxes, you - know;—te lie above him; not-merely in the knack or grani-, mer and , arithmetic, but in decency of thought and demeanor; in a word, - John must feet that h i s teacher is more of a gentleman then. he. ... ,2, ~ ;_. , , ' • . .. . . ... .. h o u se : ... 2: The School ought. o, be 'denied to:. some . uses ,-, :-. Unquestionably," horses -, • and. swine ought not to be lodged., in the 'school house, 'nor Cleetitins held'in ,- it..: I Tare, . tiGb-- aria `,quiet oughts'. - the nircernitancee of tine , house to be, - .And; over. its portal 'written "Politics; bigotrj,_ 111-nOture.ina 'filthiness are , forbidden to enter here..". '': '.- _. •: ,-; :.": - = -Yet how fat what is lags behind Whit ought to be ! . Some scholars tramp into their Behold , hotliOs into .ii htitif.f . "; Often - they , are AM *, Aini.:::'."The : *Vole establishment ' in: made: up. of fag ends, ;-:Thelteitchet Is * - pifior,',:fitttpi- I fag: end, .thiefoireTgidlienoe*are jat7endir, after their -kind i' the luitteetiOji ,mea n,,allia the: boy sees ther e is ne. eivitization Aq , liePOCF: - thererat any Prfee;idespisesitthe knees. 1i , 0 4 the, shabby ,rniers of ,the place, end... Made tip. ,by-sending *stoner irir twv. akieklitindonts;if ter dark;, .Atiil&- .. lii tiPt*Vista' tkiiii4: ..fault with,ftvi linildlik*e*Pillilit .present;_ •bnti.. hare insisted that .it should be x*liedv i ts el i ithat linf , locMyithick keptAhet went 'ei. :Oft* ivhile - Ve Were Igetrineeiredtteati , :t.iusikirturlill 2 ** . :friebail - eta* Iwilich • :- should aPpremtk: lirlaTEirilti - Itld. eglii t..%, 1 legintter, da3q 4 ;: - .:tliat 4 e - ijj40 4.4 11/° l 4' -how to ! use that :1 'tittesii.:VaWmgAiiikki Rt. titon-Itahall.beteadri.foninte•' , .;k_.. ,!, .i . :11;_ . ,: t . t i,i- 1 1. • .. Isihe7lchoot ittdigalAte&ntrOnrationi si; iiiiiiiia,l* - jiyalandllian a „chugrvcnref ".. •i ; 'lilkilk: l o49o:oataikik:ectileer* - .) 3 w a n0 4 5 14 • averymbagw;and add ..&g, With'iratiddeSinlles thedncklc.beidi inittlie: 4 . egOt 110"ladoilf L*4o)ll.lo.l*34o3tOtil.uallitiro4:: Shigle:Coßies Six Cents. iSiturational. . . iionr, and their ought to be a law- agauls , those PuMileidtrignes'ef busybodies, which greviouttl± cripple . ,the* teacher's work; It is amusing how nearsighted some men are.. A man who has one thousand donsrs, and will not give forty to'ischool, will give one hundred for.a heirse.'7A. man whp holds tip. his handi,at the - idea of' anybod's- givlug four - per cent . . for the eduCation of his chil dren,as all the time buying new vineyards or increasing the old. Now such an 0130 may be amen, but not a shrewd one. Ile is patting Ina heavy crop of mustard, -so to speak, and . hereatter.will wondeewhy It doesn't . come up grain ; he has not his eyes opeii,: to distin guish the firstliest from the second best. If a first rate public school was erected in this valley; loaferish temptations would skulk. away before It as creatures of the night be fore day-break. Every man who wanted to sellan estate, Would sell it, In that event more readily, and 'get a better price per acre; and far above all this selfish arithmetic of profit and loss- 7 for the value of human lives cannot ,be measured by potato hills or square feet of. 'loam—the children -would be blesied by it, more than anybody can imagine. For a young person cannot always be instructed if, he 'would. A time comes when he is too; Old for that. If sftree on 'one or your mountains "yonder, has been• wedged between boulders, for sixteen years, what wonder if it be dis torted? And if a Mind has been misguided as long, it Is, for him too'late; ignorance has got him ; it only remains' te - carvemore once that dreadful epitaph; Better not to have been born at all:" A sad spectacle in this world is an ignorant, vicious-old man, whom ; by retrogression of seasons, we see a happy :human creature, going - about unaware of the kiw lived future on ifs way to meet him. ' My" last ! word shall be of ' the youngsters. They are 'good ones! My motto with-them 'always has been. ..` . ratience, and patience and patience:" If John : is dull at twelve, he May be brighter...at eighteen ; and if hats dull at eighteen, why life , is long and` time is. a teacher, and. he'll be as you want'him When all old boy of - thirty.. Years -henee, when the gain of. this year's harvest is remembered as a very small thing,' him titbit large family I leavew as treat ed shall surely be remembered as, a very great_ thing, to tesze or - plague iciu, according to your deeds.—Cluroasikteamisa. QUESTION CORNER. What are - the advantages arising from a cc education of the sexes? TILTON AT THE WEST, What the People there think of Impeach. meat and Manhood suffrage. . _ Theodore Tilton, the able editor of The In dependent, has returned" home—to use' his own larguage After a hundred days of absence ; after ten thousand miles of travel by Call - canal, steam boat, wagon, and sleigh-;.after the recital of a "winter's tale" to seventy successive and long-suffering audiences. Mr. Tilton says that the people of the West are warmly - in favor of. Impeachment, while with the exception of Ohio [whose Le: gislature has just clothed itself with the sha dow of shame], every Western state is en gaged in the humane task of legislating into its, statutes the 'Equal Rights of all classes of its citizens. Mr. Tilton says that the next report that comes from. the Northwest will be of the expunging of the word "white" from half , a dozen state constitutions,. In forwardness of radical sentiment, the men who live West of the - Mississippi rebuke the then who live East. Such a legislature as has just voted disgrace upon Ohio could not= possibly have been elected in lowa or Min nesota. From Mr. Tilton's last letter-to The Independent, we male the following ex tract: ' ' The Thirty-ninth Congress—after the inev itable soilure produced by two years' resi dence is Washington, even at the distance, of a full mile from the White House—did not dare dismiss itself and return to the people without first cleansing its tarnished record of delay by giving to the nation a reconstruction bill which. sweeping with victorious majesty through both houses, - striking down the Pre sident's negative with a counter-veto, now -holds over the: misbehavior of the South the Jimord•of a military government, to reconquer the rebellion; to re establish loyalty, and to reordain The great actW t.. 1. have been morally greater had It compelled' the., immediate or ganization of stategovernmentkin the South, on the basis of their loyal citizens both white and black, instead of leaving to the Soultr the option of forming. just "and equal civil governments, or of continuing as vassals un der the rod of military rule. Nevertheless, the, military plan is so much better than the most. sanguine had reason to expect a month ago, that the day of its pas sage over the, President's veto was a day to make the blood merry in a radical man's pulse. • -I happened to be in company with my friend Frederiek Douglass in Chicago, on the announcement ofthe good news; where upon he immediately lifted his hands and cried, remembering his race and the prospect of their deliverance, "Thank God!" To the new Congress the nation looks with. new hope. Its first great duty is the impeachment of the President. • • Be it ElpOken as the will of the loyal North that the Fortieth Congress -Is charged with the solemn duty of removing a traitor from the chief Magistracy of the Republic. Noth ing on the docket ought to take precedence of this business. --The chief, mischief maker -in the nation must be 'cut short in, his career of crime. - Andrew' Johnson is, now a greater obstacle to the reconstruction of the-Union than either Robert E Lee or Jefferson Davis. These men are rebels, out of office,; : but An drew Johnson is a rebel in thelfighest of of& ces. Daily is he executing the will of these two men, instead of the will of the loyal peo ple who made him President. To govern the South by the army, while Andrew John son is the head of the army, is a mockery.— If the Military plan of Congress into succeed the army must hive a new master spirit— The Impeachment of the President is the first necessity of the situation: With a Supreme Court loyal one day and, disloyal the next, and with an Executive disloyal all days alike, 'Congress will count only one against two in the game of 'governing the. South. It mast -make success certain by grinding the Execu tie to fine dust in the-Senate, and blowing him away with the breath 'of a judiclal'scia tence by the Chief Justice. 'The country-would cheer to the echo the dismissal of Andrew Johnson to the harm -laxness of private life. I saw no audience all *hate? that`ffld not 'applaud the impeach Ment Of the President. Western men; famil tar with the President's speeches, are in the 'habit of saying that Andrew Johnson should 'nose "take aback seat." - Nor let the Fortieth Congress imitate the Thirty-ninth in the bad example of waiting two years, and.terdilY 'going its duty with. its expiring treatli. .Two years hence the Pre eident will fall off like a withered leaf. What we went is Akat heihocild be shaken off now; rA Congress to,*hich' he disdains to send a •message.mayi before,the two -years are en ded, find him denying its jurisdiction and ar resting - Its:members. Andrew. Johnson is to day the chief enemy of the Republic; let hire be removed! . • . CoLrAx, with the,single exception -'of ,Henry;Clay, 13 :the only Mari *halms had the honor of beingthree times elected Speak; er_Of the Honse.: His -qualifications for the place are probably: not leferior to those of Mr. Obit . who' has often been pronounced the most accomplished- presiding officer who ever. took-the -chair of _a legislative - body in the United Stateil His address upon taking the chair' of theToitieth 'Congress alike ap propriate and eloquent. . , We quote' a few tegrilde our steps by the justice of God and the tights of man. It is to banish ellmalice and revenge, and to jtustify'our faith by oar works. It is to anchor our legislation on what the great Commoner of England, John Bright, declares to bSto the simple but sublime principles on which meat national questions should be settled—the _basis of demi' • rights. It is to„write upon our banner these words, that will shine brighter than theaters which gem the firmament, "liberty, loy alty, and law:" • 'lt is so to make history that pos terity shall rise up and call us blessed. The Con gress which has just. passed away has written a record thit wlil bd. Tong . vemembered by the poor and friendless,Whoutit.did not forget.. Unregre- Meador misunderstood by those who denounced it aaceealtes, harshly sad unjustly Criticised by wine wbershanid have.Peewits friends, it prove.l.i to have boatman- faithful to human pro-- grew autLlihertyz than any of ire predecessors. ', Tise 7 outraged and. Oppressed ;found these can- Vessksial halls champions and friends . Its key 'nbte. hi Policy was pr ot ection to the down-trodden. Itlitiailed.nothefore the mightiest, nor neglected thirobsourest Z3' It lifted: the slave whom the rut tion-hid freed tothe full.statimo of manhood ; it pissed on our• statute backs the Civil Bights bill ;arottrntitional.magns charts, grander than all ItheMmistme that-honor_ the American, code lital, , in,sliatts.vegiow, whose civjl governments' had.bitett tdestrnyediby;ii vanquished rehelliPb,:.it. &Oise& lie s. tee of,defence to the Weakest . arashand.abould Wield the free- Inan's ballot. It proclaimed that there -eisul4 no aferitriotai recoriatriktion on a femi4ation of =repentant treason or tielinYitit„W , ..ForAktitt it will be forte if,, when we• suurowx• eeate tu ouilificesseorsi we can point. to.si, record - Wbfeh will Bhine . an asu. history)" Tyne Wm than Qt, the, ossgress sliij eat 41zured„ Woe feirfii., nate if, when we leave this OaPitol, Mir whole us -altralsturg ,permanently restor ed, resting milts sok* toaosistomistoneaot klutz, ;a l td- T rotts:l •=ll , "I"' • _ wftt'suffedu.prevallsitt Mound City fliliittla r sseymeio oith-f100d.,.. - 7 1.14 t 4 L'An-er.s-7, t Stf, • • rst•-•-.11-411--,1 ... +1.11'. , ,11..ip.1 . :i4 ; .?-, - ;:rZ. t ::. , 4 %.1- , .::?.i. , .,•; , ,,,,:.. , 1 : ~..,, BANNAN'S STEAM PEINTING lIMMINI Holzer piooxred several Presses. we are now de .to creme • • JOB iSti BOOK PEtteITING of eon seeiption at the °K lee of the biomes' Jouvoar.e.besp. .re than it can be dote at any other eslabllatunent th County. aids= : • . , . Books, Panspillets? Bill. of LIAM* , , • Larne Posters , — Railroad Tickets, Band Bile. Paper:Books, Aterieleo of Aapreematat t Time Books. • . Bill Beads, Order Books. &a At the ray shortest notice. Our sock of JOB .ffaTit is mere extensive than that of any caber office in this section of the State, and ,we keep hands employed ex preedy for Jobbing. Being a practical *inter mice)' we will guarantee our work to be as neat as any that mule turned milli the cities.- PRLYTING Di COL ORS done at the shortest notice' Books bound in - every variety of style. Manx 800 k of every description nutnufsettired, bound and ruled to order, at shortest notice. • - • - THE NEW. YORK CUSTOM ROUSE. Ms. nut Bump's ExPosvnies: In the House - on the.lsth inet.,.the matter of the New ' - York - Custom House frauds came up, when - • Mr. HULBURD (Rep N . ):offered a resolution reqUestbsk the Speaker to appoint the Committee on Public Expenditure* and. that such Committee lake into consideration tlaci report of the Committee of t he last House on the subject of the New . .York Custom House, and report what action, if any,. is ad visc ble in the premises. In explaining his' object, he referred to the investigation made'- by the Committee - into the affairs of the New York Custom House, and to the card issued 'by Collector Smythe, charging the Commit tee with a spiteful animus, because of his in- . ability to make all the appointments the Com mittee had asked for. That was a grave charge, but there was not a shadow of foun dation for it. The Committee had never -asked an appointment from Mr. Smythe which he bad not made, but on the contrary, ho,• bdd tendered to them appointments which ibex never received. Referrieg also to the denial of Senators Doolittle and Patterson that they had, not received one copper from Mr. Smythe, he said that the Committee had .never made such charge. The Committee had simply reported the fact that Mr. Smythe testified he had intended pay certain sums to those Senators; and they b• tl not denied that there - was an arrangement of that kind. He dismissed that' part of the subject with' the simple , remark that, on the stippOsition• that the Committee was still in existence, ho lied been approached with the offer of testi mony which would bring that matter yet closer - home. Referring to the charge made' by Mr. Smythe, that part of his testimony had been suppressed, and all of it distorted, he denied that there was any truth in it , sad as• serted that Mr. Smythe had been invited to come before the Committee, .and to make the fulleat statement; that he bad done so, and - had subsequently come to the committee ronm and revised his testimony, striking out and Inserting vvhatever.lte. chose. In this Connection he sent to the Clerk's desk and had read a letter from an Assistant to the stenographer, making similar denial and as-' sertion. The only part of Mr. Smythe's tes timony suppressed was the answer to a clues iton as to whether he had ever made any presents to the families of Senators. That answer being, "Yea, Sir.; I once gave Sena te? Patterson's lady forty cents' .worth of candy."' He (Mr Hulburd) had thought It so impertinent, soilippant, and so mean, that be had directed the -reporter not 'to take down that answer. All of Mr. Smythe's tes timony was in the hands of the public print er, except a portion. retelling, to his having improperly procured from an assistant to the reporters a report of his testimony, after , having been refultal it by the Committee.— He declared that the Custom House in Walt wreet was Under Mr. Smythe's administra tion, reeking with corruption, and that. in reference to the bonded warehouse business a more flagitious, improper, - disreputable, and •disgraceful tranaanction than that shown in the testimony had never been made. public: He also declared that th' i e evidence showed that while Mr. Smythe took - an oath every month that he received nothing from cartage, &c., be actually did . receive every month . $219 from that sourced which money was handed to his secretary, who kept it until the monthly oath had been taken by the Colleet;. or, and then , paid it over by checks or other • wise. He would never forget the indigna-, tion be , felt when a witness testified that Mr. Smythe bad said to him, "I AM D-D son • RY TIIAT I EVER UNDERTOOK TO CARRY THE PRESIDENT'S DAUGHTERS." Mr. 8113010, to, be sure, denied that he bad said so; but the Witness said to him, "I DON'T lzynw WHAT YOU THOUGHT, IDO NOT KNOW WHAT OCCA• SION YOU 11AD TO BAT so, BUT I DO KNOWTILAI YOU USED THESE VERY W01103."- The hour allowed for debatehaving ceased, Mr. Hulburd was. on motion of Mr. CHAN - LER (Dem., N. Y. )•' permitted to continue his remarks. • Referring to the name of Mrs. Perry as connected with the investigation, he said she was not a myth; her veritable fires , once in the Executive Chamber was proved more than-once; and the sett words there spoken to her. It was in proof that she was 'to have shared one third of the profits of the general order business, awl one of the wit .nesses had told him, after he left the stand, that Mrs. Perry had a written agreement to .the effect,-and that the President of the Uni ted Sates had read that agreement. He char acterized Mr. Smythe as a vampire sucking tett the life blood of the commerce of Now York;l2,,Lotrtering commerce, and making it snbOrdinatelo own personal aggrandize ment; and to ob.i.Tts. rn conclusion, he relieved the euliciat n,p4.lrters of the House of all blame itilthe matter u3..Which he bad referred. The person who lied Improperly furnished the testimony to Mr. Smythe - had been only ternroraiPy employed, and had been dismissed, even before the matter be came known. Mr. CHANLER obtained the floor, and de clared himself an "advocate of the reform which the report of the Committee contem plated. Mr. Fernando Wood (Dem. N. Y.) - In the course of the debate saidif the statements made against Smythe were true, the respon - nibility for his removal rested on , the Presi dent; and iftbo President did not remove him, then he (Mr, Wood) was almost going to soy that the President himself should be Impeached. . • The - question was taken on Mr. Ilultaird's resolution reviving the Committee on Public Expenditures, and instructing it to continue the investigation of New York Ctistoin House. Theresolution vvas.adoptol.• = In the course of the discussion. Mr. 11111,- BURP stated that a gentleman told him yes terday that Mr. Smythe bad told him the day before that he had received a letter from the -President's, private secretary assuring him that he was all: right, , the expression being that'll° was "himkey dorey. ' [Laughter.] The intimate relations of the President in matters of public moment, with women like Mrs. Cobb and Mm. Perry, is very disgrace ful. It soon will become a question whether a respectable woman can enter the White House without having ber reputatluct affec ted to a serious extent. After these startling revelations if the Pre sident should continue to retain Smythe in office, ho will independent of his other crimes, richly merit impeachment. , • erFitz Hugh Ludlow.is insane. ar-The population of New Orleans is 275,• 000. Gr i ne Ohio crop. of maple sugar- Will be large this year. -- - tarCeal has been discovered at the, Port land quarries, Connecticut." • orlt is De Bow's brother that is dead, not the great. original REVIEW man: irirThe receipts from internal revenue du ring the past week amounted to $2,317, t2G IS. GrA fire at Corning, New York, on • Fri day, destroyed a-large number of buildings. Or The immense shell bombs, spelt as worn forty years ago; are to supersede the water - , , • '. " win Philadelphia two profesEioital thieve' have been sent to the penitentiary, pt - three years. tar Marshal Bazaine and the last of the. French troops' left Mexico "on the; 10th of, ei-In some villages of Prussia , one- third of the population will leave for Ainerlca iii the spring: a•The business portion of the town of Al bany,. Georgia, was recently destroyed by fire. Loss $200,000. '2,002 Maisatthusetts .soldiers- died of starva , ion "and hardships. in, the rebel prison pens during the war. rarThe First. Orthodox Cnngregationll Church, .on Somerville ;greet, Bokon, • Weig destroyed hv, fire on Saturday. erThe New York World says: "Even the abolition 'of. slavery is by no means the drawback it mlghttt first seem." GrMr. Elwell, of Belfast, kept his lucre in his • cellar, and , the'fact being discovered by boys„ they relieved him of $1,009 of it ' 'rThe Maine Legislature has adJournOd after a session of two months. Its members get $l5O-per session. be it long or short. rErCol. Levi C Turner, Judge Advocate General in, the Wsr D partmenr,, died in Washington on Wednesday of last week. • tarlion. Charles Eames, formerlY Commis stoner to the Sandwich Island', and Minister to Venezuela, died in Washington 'ortOngr ..„ day.. orA silly. English nobleman Us 74114 ed fifty, thousand francs to 'Hallo: 'Oh the Louver; for tbe boots sheiwOre:isitluiq DON. rrA woman M Idsroay ow the, Central .Railroad, south of. Glint*, fec:enfty 'Sold her foiir for ; tsiotdisurelisee a, set of bins lero j ebm „ tor I N , H:ltriwiand; aided -clerk Irk.a wisre - hause:ot bj,etaptdit. rliasaecelved news from Pri t hat- he htts ,fallen /tar to an - eShite tsielfe'yertrii of"age :wen starved tb destliby his father, at Bromluy. .Englard. aikw:days ago.- • _ 9.111 Y 1.7/3 . .ity,pounda. , tarW heti Gardnfu• wits iseented; in Eingrit, his-gave .the following warning to those with blihesring: ' e,., -,- 0 -; , `:1 4 1 . 0w, my- dear. frienils„ic. thrrit.STS July al6ng.you Who have been aildfeted ditak ' int litandr„ Or to have bad intsociatekliteg -Yott4tolresp:fromtherit, for:they win: iuroy bothe,rniustke of - svpme." - z !. BOOR BINDERY• THE STARTLING FEAITDS. PEN, PASTE AND SCISSORS
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers