The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, June 01, 1867, Image 2

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Be just and 'few.. ; • .
La an tihe uud tturts atm•et !ale thy countrrs,
Thy God's and truck a." • •
TELE SUPREME. ANDNEW .6)D2CPFAL
COURT. •
Of the terrible - condition of affairs that for
many years existed in Schuylkill County, the
people not only of the County bat of the
State, were . painfully aware. During the past
Winter and during many. months previously,
the columns of this paper teemed with ac
counts of the most fiendish outrages perpe
trated upon inoffensive citizens. Within four
years we had reco`rded fifty murders commit-.
ted . within our boiders, while robberies and
kindred outrages -were innumerable., Life
was insecure ; good citizers were driven from
the' County, while capital_ to the extent of
hundreds of thousands of dollars, was de
terred for want of protection from the law
less bands that infested the Region, from
seeking investment here.
Under this stale of anirs,.when the au
thorities of the County - seemed powerless to .
enforce the laws when'erime held high car
nival in - our midst ; when longer patience
would have ceased to be a virtue, and wh,.n
vigilance ComMittees were :seriouslythought
of, our citizens went to Governor Geary and
the Legislature, to / seek by legal measures,
for protection from the murderers and robbers
of the County.. • • . .
Our citizens asked fur and obtained Acts to
establish a new Criminal Court-and to draw
juries, and for the'orginizttion of a Police
force. These measures were obtained for a
good juirpose—to enforce the laws and give
protection to the lives and property of_ our.
people. •An additional. Law - Judge to assist
Judge Ryon in - his duties, was asked for lit
the last session. But the majority of our chi
zens preferred a separate Court which would
entail no additional expense, and which they'
thought would be effective in repressing
crime: Qf its alleged unconstitutionality,
not much was thought, in the face of the re
peated. violations here. of the law and the
con.titution in the escape of criminals from
merited purjshment, and in the apparent li
cense givpn them to murder, rob, and destroy
property.
Well, the legislation asked fair was. ob
tained. • Its mere moral effect' was immediate
and good. Crime of magnitude-in the Coun
ty immedia'ely Ceased, proving the truth„of
wha' • we have r, ,
rw cpeatedly asserted,. that
knowledge among the lawless that theould
be adequately punished for their crimes when
arre , ts - d, mould deter them from. further
crime. People in diflorent sections of the
County congratulated themselves on the hap- ,
py..change, and capital again sougbilnyest
ment where it' could receive pnuenion - :
Butit seem. that the murdenirsand robbers
of Schuylkill -County have friends and well
ivishers in high places. These men recently
carded the Act establishing the new Court:
.to the Sunreme Court, on the question of its
constitutionality. The argument in the case
wad heard no the 24th ult., and nn Monday
last the Supreme court it is understnod—for
the written Opinion or the Court-will not be
delbiered until its meeting
,at Pittsburgh in
Octobernext—in effect decided that the ex
clusive jurisdiction given to the new Court is
unconstitutional ; that therefore, the old
court still exists, and can proceed to try cases.
As. to concurrent juriidiction the question
WAS not decided by the Court. .• • . •
It will thus, he seen that tintwithstanding
the effort made to have the Act establishing .
the new Court declared unconstitutional, the
Supreme Conrt does not decide that the new
Court cannot be organized. We - presume
therefore; that under the law the new. Court
will forthwith go into operation.
The Jury law which is a, special Act - for
Schuylkili County, and which. provides for
the appointment of two . Corminssioners un
til the election next Ctetober, -and which`does
not include the Judge; is in full' force.. They
ought at. once to denand.the jciry wheel from
.the Comity Conithissioners. If the latter
Fliun Id refuse to give it up, their action will
be illegal and the juries drawn by 'them
. can be oitjected to on that ground on the tri
al of criminal causes by the old Court.
the wheels of justice should. be stopped,•tem
porarily, in the County. the respOnsibility
will rest
-upon-the- men who are working
against the legislation which has re-estailliil;
ed law and order in this murder-ridden (.3oun
ty, and whose sole purpose seems to-be to
maintain their.prirty ascendancy and retain
local offices
,by . acting in this 'matter
,in the
interest of the ctiminala who have given this
County such a infamous reputation abroad
These men must understand that if by .
..their acts they finally - succeed in re-inangu
ling a reign of terror in Comity ;
. if our best citizens shall in the future, be shot
down on the:highway by the friends of these
men, and if our citiz, ns . should be compelled
to resort to lynch law tO protect the commu
ni'y, the respensibility,will rest upon, the men
who are endeavoring to nullify the legislation
mAieh has done so much gOod. already; and
which was imperatively demanded by our
I
. people_ •
—Since the r bove Lad been placed in type
We have received tLe following which is a
copy of the order of the Supreme Courtin
the case. • The written opinion of the Court
in the matter, as we have already stated, will
not be delivered until its October session :
Conimonw,oith Ir.. the Judnelti of Com
mon Picas of Mchuytkill County. •
landatuna, and now.to wit,,liay 27th, 1867.
,This Cll9O came up for hearing at this term of
the Supreme Court, for lhe Mitlale.Dintriet.of the
Commonwealth, and being fully argued by cone.
Eel, on consideration, it is ordered, and adjudged
that judgment he entered open the demurrer for
the relator, and that the respondents in the writ
of alternative mardanins, do proceed to
.order
venire to - issue for the son - anoning - of jurors for
the Courts of Over and Terminer; und general
jail delivery, and of QuarierSessions of thepeace,
in the County of Schuylkill, to and at the times
heretofore provided by law for. bolding the eaid
Courts in said County, and the respondents proceed
to bold said Comte as by law they have been bold
en, in and for said County of Schnylkilli and.that
they, the said respondents, pay the costs of this
silt. ,
PROTECTION
The movement which lois just been Start
ed in New York by tlw friends of Protection
to American luditstry. prOmises We are grat
ified to 'f
at e. to embrace (-yin State in' the
troion in a National organizitin on•this im
portant question. Not only each Slate, but
etch county and township should have its
American Intlnstrlal League tri cn:.operate
with the National Levu c. This movement
embraces prominent and: influential men of
all sections. -Ex Governor Brown Pf Gvoi
gia will in the future act with , the Protective
Tariff party. The present movement will
embrace cheap railroad tansy Itation among
the reforms demanded. Some interesting
statistics in reference to the depressing - effect of
high charges in connection with trinsporta
Con, wilt be found in Mr. Sherwood's speech
pnbli , bed on the Fi , st Prige.' It is there
shown - how Pennsylvania suffers from 'this
evil.
Schuylkill County should enter at once.up
on the work of foiming Frotective Tariff
Leagues. The Free Traders are laboring
:industriously to succeed in. establishing Free
Trade as the policy of-the country, and the
workingmen who are vitally interested should .
:take, an . active interest in defeating them.—.
Vote for no man for office who is not an rap-
. qualified Protectionist. - When Congress re
assembles, petitions with a million signatures,
attached, demanding Pro_tection, should be
sent into that body. Fill them up this Elm;
" 1 nier and send them in early in the session ---
•
The people should insist that some attention
be paid to their Interests, and that. Congress
cease to be controlled by foreign interests and
by 'money shavers. 'Unfaithful Congress
men should be denounced, and be made to
feel that they are the servants and not the
masters of the people. Let us organize
• thoroughly and victory must perch upon the
banner of - Profee'ion to American Industry,
_
Taz UNION STATE CONVENTION.--TDIN COD
-Tendon for the purpose of placing in nomi
nation a candidate for the Supreme 'Bench, to
be voted for at the wining October election,
will meet in Williamsport, •Pa.,,on Wednci
day, 26th instant. The delegates from this
County, who Were , appointed at the Union
County Convention held In August last, are,
Senatorial, M. P. Fowler, of Tamaqua. liep
xesentattve, Dr.. 12. H. Coryell, of SL Clair . :
Pc. J. of Port Clinton, and Seth W.
Geer, E-q ;of hlineravllle. They were -!n :.
suucted to support Judge Parry. .
RIEEMMI
,'..The -development- of. That k -Band is still
progressing and new loCalities are opening to
41-m!nstrate its general existence aa-a•bed.—
, The ore'at the orieha tl place of discovery in
the McGinnes al aft is in very tine condition
and in good and regular order. -The "fault"
• recut - 1y encountered, was too email - , and in
significant to deserve.that title, and in alarge
and properly opened 'mine it would not have :
interfered with the production, or obtained
particular notice.. At the . East Slope the bed
ha also - in In good, condition;
while other openings to the east look favor
able.
• Nreare able.to make an emphatic as
sertion that the Black Band Is a regular bed '
and no "hireling," notwithstanding reports to
the contrary. A few weeks more:of explora
tion will satisfYthe 'most .skeptical on this,
The Belmontectal }Being CompanY's prop
erty Consisting of afx:tat 1000 aertA has recent,.
ly been mild to a weal thY New York Company,
whetwill - atonce proceed to develop the pro
perty for Black Band and erect furnaces in
doe time: -
Those who use the. Black Band ore—the
demand for which is greater than the present
supply—state that the Iron made from it,
will render tbe importation of Beitch Pig
entirely unneeessary. . .
TliE DIFFERENCE.—Tbe law closing the
liquor'shops in P-hiladelphia on Sunday, took
effect`last week with the following results:
May 19:Shops open; arrests by Police.. 151
May - 26. Shops closed; " " " .. -60
Sa much for closed Liquor shops on Sun-
The PRESS: says the bar-lenders are all in
favor of closing up the Bars on Sunday, tic
cause it gives , there a. day of rest. This is
true,. but soppose the Press should succeed
in getting the street cars to rcto on Sundays
—bow would it be with the conductors And
drivers of the street cars 7 Don't you think
that these workitigmen would want. day of
rest also? These men, are generally: poor and
lire on their salaries, and are they not also en
titled to the day . of rest which the laws 'of
God and . man' have given them? Is there any.
bigotry in this view of the question?'
EDITOR'S TABLE.
TM , LADY'S FEIEND f 0241100 is a fine number.
The illustrations, fashion plates, pattern , literary -
matter, ete., i
are beautiful and ntereeting. Pub
lirbed bv Deacon & Peterson, 319 Walnut street,
Philadelphia. • . , ' -
Tan Neils - -Burrisit REVIEW for March ' has
been. republished by the Leanard Scott Publish
ing Company, 38 Walker,street, New York. The
articles in Ibis number, are, The. Policy nf Trades-
Unions : Oc , orge Buchanan ; The Political Writ
ings of Richard Cobden; On thharacter of the;
Old eC
Northern Poetry . : Victor Cousin ; The Oyster-
Fisheries ; Oxford University Exteneion •, The.
Bengal Famine of 1866:1A superior number of
this able English Review. - •
• THE Air a:Tile MoN - rnis —The Jane number of
this magazine contains among 'other contribu
tims, articles nn St. Louis, Shakeneare, - Negro
Spirituals, Russian America, the Comedians. the
E trip Bars of Montreal, &c., from the pens of
Prof O. W. - Holmes, John O. Whittier, E. P.
. Whipple, Janus Parton and' others. -
copies
by Ticknor & Fielde, - Boston: • Single
cpies can be obtained at the .bookstore of Ban
nan & Ramsey, in this Borough. . -
G6DET'S LiDV'S Booe..The June 'number cam
pletee the thii te.eeventh year of : this popular
maeazine'e existence, Year after ysar friend
Grel , y has' d.-voted his 'wealth of talents and hie
means to render. the Book authority in matters
Pertaining to the boudoir and drawing ronm, and
lie has sne6-erled: To.the ladies it is indispensa
ble. Tice number before us is beautifully Blue
trated, while its literary contents and useful sne
tieetione. will toe are sore; be highly appreciated
by its fair readers. .
"Our, rorso Forv,,C frir .Tnne is a capital
nnnt
bcrof this boys'.and girls' magazine. The con,
tents are, A . Reneliian lloutoo, by ViPnx .
Monstache—Your illustrations; Part I.• of The
Lost S'ster, by L. E S, ; What Pussy Willow Aid,
by Mrs. .Siowe—ilinstratud ; The •. Wonderful
t3eads, by Wm. Wirt Sikes—tbree illustrations;
Flower Secrets for Fan; by Sirs. GPO. Warner :
Da.l,ls's Man, by - Jail° G. An&tin—illristrated';
Swinging on a Birch-Tree. by Lucy Larcom—fall
page illustratien ; Part of Glod Old Times,
by .Elijah Kellogg—two illnstrations : Archery
and Archers, by Chas. J. F , strr , --illustrated ;
The 'Motherless. Turkeys, by Marian Dmiglas9—
illustrate.l•,,A . S•ing•of thelloa.s, by Emily finnt
ington Miller Music, by J; R:.Thomv—illua
trated R ,nnn - tbe Evening Lamp— two .illnatra
[Mtn :' Our Letter Enx—illmitrated Published
by Ticknor and Fiel,l3,l24Trembnt street, 808-
AUNT MARGAEET's Tuovut.E. A TALE OF LOVE,
SELITSIME:4S AND RE:',TRomitor. , —This Charming
little tale which has ju-t.been published by T. B.
Peterson S Brothers,. Philadelphia. has an addi
tional interest imparted to it, from the fact that
it is the first work of the daughtcr of Charles,
Dickens.. The London Szttuidiyllecipw does not
hesitate to say that for, pathos and hlyllie tender
nesS it will compete with even the best novel of
the dsy. It has nothing of the grandeur of ,high•
art about it ; it has nothing efleroic tragedy nor
of stately romance, still less of sensationalism ;
it ie absolutOy free from-.al; deadly crime's, free
from all monstrous vices, from all maddening
mysteries ; being just - a quiet story of eelfisbnees
on the one hand, and of love betrayed on the
other,. with the retribution sure to follow upon
wrong as the moral justice - done at thG end. "Yet
it is, a charming book, and worth half a hundred
fictions of the more ambitious - and elaborate
kind.•
- The.price of this book is only twenty-flee cents,
and it can be obtained at the bookstore of Bannan
t Ramsey, in this Borough.
"Tux RECTOR'S Win ; on THE : VALLEY OF . A
LICNDIIED FIRES.,"—This is of those de,
lightful stories of Eogliish social life, which has
just come from the press of T. -B.: Peterson &
Brothers, the enterprising Philadelphia publish
ers. It is full of simple country life, and written
in the plainest way. John and Emily the hero
and heroine, •are a clergyman and his wife, and
the beginning of the story sees them on their
journey into Wales, to take up their residehee in
one of its YalleYs. -The Bern ards are:very wealthy
people, emit") them are the Leslie's indebted for
their living. Emily, the heroine, is a'wonderful
character, too good to be natural, for nothing of-_fecte her calm, serene, amiable disposition;whil
John is rather desponding. The children of these
people at - . tinst seem unlike ordinary mortals, but
as they advance in years they heoonse Moro of.
the world—worldly. One of thebest characters of
this book is an old nurse, Wiley,—and in fact,
there are no bad ones. The Robertses are like
very many people, full of show, vanity and snob
bishness, always striving to rival their neighbors.
Lady. Armitage is a rich sister of Mrs. Leslie, and
has no children of her own, so that she has par
tially. adopted from time to time one'of the many
danglvers of the Leslies. These girls, all ex
cept two, marry before the story closes--one of
them Mr. Bernard, son of the
the others do equally well;- all -
marrying men of
their hearts. The eldest son, John, who dies be
fore coming of age, evinces falent of no ordinary
kind, and his death causes lift :long grief to his
father. The parents live to celarate their golden
wedding, and to gather around them, apt only.
their daughters' 'own children, but grand-children.
The BohertseS die off, and the story closes : with
the-last of their race.
'This boolthas an.intonsely moral tone through
ont, and should have a very large and extensive
- sale, as it is fully e cma.l to "Jane Eyre.".
This work is printedd ,by the rdesers. Peter
son with large, clear type, on tine, white paper,
and is bound in that peculiarly neat and attractive
style in which this firm' sends out publications of
this character. .
. Copies of this charming book can be obtained
at the bookstore of Batman i Ramsey, in this
Borough. • .
"Nicam NICKLEIII."—., This is the foartli vol
ume of the "Diamorid Dickens," an edition 'of
which any anther -might be' proud, even though
he were inclined to set the highest pace upon his
writings. •It is
,a miracle of -cheapnese and neat
'nese'. Of Nicholas Nickleby comae it is un
necessary to .pay much. It is of the - author%
earlier works; and perhaps it is the most massive
of them a 11...
Its appearance made him free - of
the, literary guild-. • Many passages in' it are . not.
surpassed by the best of his snbsequent
.and there is a Dame depth in some of the inci
deans that it is not easy to parallel. Probably no
one of Mr. - Dickens's stories have farnished'more
characters that have become tioturerain the mind
than NicholaS.Nickleby. John Browdie, 'Tilde .
Price, -Newman - Nogge, Mr. Mantalini, - Ralph
Nick:eby,, Tim Linkidwater, the 'brothers Cheery-
Me, the Grammies family, (with a special place
for 'the Phenoinenori,') Arthur Gride,•Smike, all
the Nqueerees, Slits La Greevey, and Miss - Knag;
are they not just. ae well known to n's all as if we
had met them.all tun, and again•duriug the Mat
thirty year s, which is 4011 t the date of their first.
appearance on the 'stage of life ?- -spealt
ing of 'lns edition.of Dickens's writings, we may
mention that the publishers have. honorahly,es
tablished theirriglit to issue by sending to the ,
Rather a large sum of money, the' receipt of Whial
that geutleman has acknowledged in the - must
courteous terms; thus showing himself entirely
satisfied with their comas. Their voluntarily lib
eral conduct in all their transactions with foreign
authors shows that they areutterly incapable of,
ungentlemanly conduct, or uf availing themselves
of mere legal advantages in matters o[. Mimesis.
The Illustrated Edition; is green morocco cloth,
with a -gold medallion portrait, of .the •nuther,
. costs :150 per volume. An edition precisely sim-
ilar iO respect to printing. and,pap r, but without
. the plates and bound in crimson morocco cloth, is
sold at $1.25 per volume. The books are elegant
• enough for. the richest, and cheap imcnigh for the
poorest..' "The Diamond Dickens"- should find a
place in every honsein the laud. The people who
read the English humorist and moralistcan hard
ly fit to,grow wiser and better. • • • • ,
The publishers Meagre...Ticknor and Yields,
Boston; will issue " a volume a Month until the se
ries is complete. •• • '
goad gdfairo.
Weekly Almanac.
•
, 67.—June. • moors. Haan
•
1-
2 SUN DLT
4. Tassu►t....
5 Wmxran►T
6 Tnasau►t ..
ENUDAT....
BIETEOROLOGIOAL TABLE
Tpuperature'nt Orrenwood during the week ending
liagleth. Ism. • - •
25
.....
21
22
29..
The Odd Peotas' Ashland r aill shortly
M. 8. - Bell,. Oiler 'Burps's, hut beei vO7 M
but in now convalescent. : - • . •
'Port tarbon wants three Male - sad four timire
teachers.' Bee advertisement.. -. •
.
There V6B be/ll:arta display .of Northern
lights on Monday night. .
• ,
On and after... Moe 2d tberet will be tie train is,
do between Pottsville and Ashland. .
. . •
there was false. alarm Of fire on 'llarsday
evening, bringing the Fire Dspartment oat.. •
&r male atid-thfee feiziiileleachfrre ,
ue wanted
4
fo: the public admit) of eobuylkill Tointektip.
=Mitnni
BL CK HANV.
td.. 210 16 am.
reef Q. 9 1 41; mei.
Ll6ll a eve.
Lest 9.,..t5 033 mo.
4 S 7 24
4 31 7 25
4 n'r 26
4 30 I 26
4 BO T 27
4 291
4 .49;7:23
64 0 i 63 0
62 62
61 62
66 60
72 69
84 zs
76 6D
maw
Duirim the month which closed yesterday,
, wat.r-falis were very fashionable with Dame Na
Totnorrow.—Tsr . entv-rec.cialiiindac of greyest' .
ti 47102 Euter. MI6 lay gth,l4 nom, and
54 minutes.
. . •
• • .
Crir] el .game of cricket will be pisyeil at
Schuylkill llaveri this afterttoon.• 'Wickets Will be
pitched st 3 o'clock- ' _ ••• ' '
Mr. Mann' form...rly of :the :Pottsville Houee,
.this Borough, has become proprietor of the AtV•
gusts Hotel,'Sunbury. - • . • • ,
. Grand'Army . of the Republic:-On the 30th of
Ap•il last, a Post of this rapidly' growing Order
was established in. Llewellyn. Its number ie, 59.
. .
Boy Billet—On Wedne.sday last a boY aged 10
years, on of. kr: John Murray, of Gilberton, was
accidentally killed at a mine there by being caught
in a belt " • .
'A paOnt has been isßned to 8.. L: retherolf,
Tamaqua, ansignor to self sod Hiulesty, of
the same place, for improved attachment to stores.
for generating gas: ' . • •
Deeds fur b - ind made within the State, mutt he
'recorded within 'six months, or they will be de
clared, void against subsequent purchasers or
mortgages for value. • •• - • -
T.aterday we had the plassare or meeting Ma:.
)at E. R. Stillman of the Array', whom) health has
improved 'duce hie retain frem Dakotah Ticrito
ry. He is now stotyine4' • •
.
.
..The; new Jitry*Lcn does not inereeie- the pay
or jaioni to 12 50 per day; as has been stated ; it
only provides for thatleim per day' as the coropen-.
sation for the Jury Commissioners prcividisd for in
. . • •
. .
.
The application of easier oil or sweet oil to new.
boots, it is said, makes them as, soft as a buck
skin glove. It is also stated to be the best appli
cation 'that can be made . to 4thider a new boot
• The Union Hotel; this Borongb,..Tacob Litiden
inutb, proprietor; hap 'recently been -related, re
painted and repapervd, rendering it one of the
most popular, comfortable and pleasant hotels
here for s: journeys. . • • •
•
Beautiful atatnettes have just been reoeived by.
Barman & Ramseyy.. Two groupe.., 'Taking the.
Oath," and "Uncle Ned's .School," are especially,
flue. For parlors we know no- ornaments at once
so artistic, handsome and'ciaeap, as these aiatn-
On Tuesday of last week a family living in
Spruce street, Itfabanoy City; were. surprised on,
opening their door in the morning to find a. male
child about four 'months old on the spet. The
mother was found and the child returned to her
for .better care in the future.%
The Odd Vellow Cemetery In Tamagna will be
dedicated-ori the 10 h of Jane, on which occasion
there will be a parade of the Order. The Ceme ,
tory is being adorned.-kith trees, flowers, etc., a
sexton's house is being erected, and in bonnie of
time it will no 'doubt', be a beintifal spot.
George F. Harmen, dnring the - Rebellion .
soldier of CoMpany C; Fifth Pcnnsilvsnia
.Cav
alry, died .at Lis, residence: at Mahanoy Plane,
this County, on the 16th-ult. aged 45 years: Hie
remains were interredin the Methodist Cemetery,
Phoenixville, Chester, county, Pa., on the 19th.
The deceased was' a good'aoldier -and . estimable
citizen.
Chimney Sicallows.-4-.Quite 74 colony or this spe-
Cied_ of birds has, eel eted for, its abiding place
this Beason, a large chimney, at the rear of Trinity
Church: When they retire in.the'evening to their
quarters it is interesting to see them by hundreds
sweeping around iri .a complete circle, _and. drop
ping one by one into the chimney.. :
. .
C r narlei E. Beck, whose warehonse is in Morris
Addition, sells a most excellent artical, of green
corn known as Winslow's.. It ii carefully canned,
and has a delightful flavor' when. cooked. We
recommend It: to the attention 'of housekeepers.
Nr. Beck has also' for sale: fine. No' I mackerel,
Pquallo . any that we have seen 'in this market.
Give him-a cell.• • .
• Amattlt• a nd Nobable• Attempted Robbery.-On last Stintlay evening, a citizen of-. Mahanoy.
;Pit y..cei his way to Alahaony Station pp the Lehigh
Railroad, was attacked ly.'-three men. They'
kn e 1 , him ihiwitl; he gave an. alarm, and
wime. people -living in Hill's, IionRCS ran to his as
siStance, when the assailants fled.. • He' refracted
Mini Dog . SPcne in ah,ino (lAe last.
week tne intribitatits or Malioncy City. were
thrown into a statd - or 'excitement by the appear
twee of -a siippiseil. mad dog„in thP streets, fol ,
Inwed by a orowil of men and hnys with clubs,
stones, pistols aivinther weapons. • Slme sail thp
pin - Sclera Were more Mad . than the dog, and froth
what we' bear of the dog's actions, he .eertainly,
had conaiderable method in his madness.
Sag'e Tea in PiVase &rent in . g.—An old remPds
for exees:tive sweating ie again brought to .pnblic
notice in the shape of cold. sage tea. -. It is made
by taking a •large-teaspoonful. of choppr-d sage
leaves, and boiling them . in six - ounces of water
for two or three minutes. The.dec , ‘Ction is then
left to stand and ciol, and is strainill and sWeet
(med. to the taste. This remedy - has been used
with benefit-in the eillignative.sweating, as it-is
called, of-pulmonary cimaumption, - • ,
There appears to he rtAreat negint on the, part
'of the School' Directors to publish the account of
the receipts and cxpenditnres of their respective
districts. as required by the Act of As-embly.
The State Superintendent of Common Schools
states that this sartioe oftlie law is as obligatory
upon.theßonid of Direcii.:rs. as is the section re
( - inking them to keep open schools, and a neglect
to perform this duty aecordhig to:law will subject
Directors to removal by the courts, the same as
the negleetof any other.dnt]y'fequired by law.
The Adraidair of 7,ifeinsuraoce..—Yeaterday
'keesrs, Robert-C. Co., general insurance
agents, paid $5OOO to Mrs. Littlehales, widow of
the late Wm. Littlehalis, who was murdored
near Gleh Carbon, being the amount of insurance'
upon his life. The entire cost to Mr. Lit tlehalee
had been mg. With the sum - received Mrs: Lit•
tlehales has purchased a homestead for herself
and 'children, and willte comfortably fixed. •An
other striking illustration of the sigoal advantage
cit life and accidental insurance. It is a precaution
none should omit to take. •
• Police Mailers.—The nornbei arrests made
by Marshal Heisler7e police-during • the month of
May just closed; was; 89.. The tfficiency and ne
cessity of this forc s. may be more fully _ appreci
ated when we state that many . of, these; rrests
could'not have been made ifl the .force had not
been in c ilatence;. as they were .eff, eted in
.t he
heretofore Most lawless. sections of the County..
Fsets'tbing is quiet and orderly at the'different.
collieries; and the bosses Are well satisfied with
the state of affairs under.the new. police systetn.
On Friday .night.' of last 'week the Allentown
Band. which accompanied the visitiog: firemen,
serenaded Col. Contier,.l2Obt. F.--Weaver, Esq.,.
Judge Byeu, Mr: Northall,. and 'other citizens,
and were handsomely entertained. •
On' Sat.nrdac mei - fling the Columbia boYs.left
for home which: they reached at G o'clock • that
.• •
The Labigh Yulley DailY tierce of Monday, eaye
The "Flow' tail in worrim to ex pleas their gratefalneee
In the citizerel ot . the .ditierent uncne in which they
eto; rted, and through which they passed.: • . • .
The Nninhering ef..Lhaises .
Tpri.n.—As our
eitizena - are aware;. Council reeently. psased . an
ordinance rconiring the house 3 of - the Borough to
be numbered. We Understand trial to Mr. Joseph
Boa - eri Las been entrusted the duty of .number
ing. - He has served notice's on. our eitizeps and.
in now engaged in putting up tlie'nfimhehiin ac-s
cordance with - the rules. laid down by 'Council.
Theeost of °telt number is from 75,conts to $1.54,
according to .style.":l"ion-compiiiinee with this
ordinance will render a person liable toe penalty; .
and it would b 3 well Lir all to attend to having
their houseiinumbered.
Leclui'P by a Retired Army O ffi tpr.—Cal. Bruce,
an old officer o?.the United States Army; •7R years
of .age, and now - on the retired' list, will lecture
this evening in 'Caine Ball. • Flis-subject, will be
the Indians of the West, .among whom - he. has
lived, and - with whose custornaand manners he-hi
thoroughly conversant. During the lecture he
will give vivid descriptions of the Indian Council;
War Whoop, War Danae,'.the Green- Corn Feast;
the Indian Marriage and Religious 'Ceremonies,
ke.. The whole to be - highly Moral and in
teresting. We Lope onrcitizens will give the old
Colonel a fine house.' . • ' . -
Acriderl.- On` Tnetiday afternoon. last' While
John McCullough, of. ilad elphia, , a Workingman
in the employ of Steward Stevens, -iron door,:
etc., mannfactnrors of that City", was engaged in
putting, up iron awning posts in front.of.ljnion
Hall,this-Borongh,'he fell froth a scaffolding . to
the stone pavement, a disfance of .about: fifteen
feet.' He was conveyed . to Druntheller's . Hotel3
and Upon examination . it was foam:1 . 11ml he had
sustained a fracture of one of his legs:. Mr. L.
F. Whitney:ftirnished a comfOriable conch, and
Mr: McCullough , was taken in the afternoon train
to the City and placed in Pennsylvania Hospital.
. .
. .
. Distressing Accident.-On the afternoon of the•
24th nit., about, 3 o'clock. 'Charles Seitzinger,.
Coal train brakownen - on the. Mine Hill Railroad,
fell from a train near Gordon, and was rim cm. L.'
His head Was fearfully mmilated, .and his right
leg andleftarm broken. INath mnathave been
almost instantaneous. - He had entered anon his
dories -on the Road,'only the , precious Monday.
The deceased who was -a- most estimable young
man, was the eon of Capt. Israel and 'Margaret
Selizinger, 'of - °Onion, and at • the time of his
death - was 18 years and amonths!old. • Ills sad
den and terrible death in .-the . bloorci youth,-is
a, great blow: to his parents. His remains were.
interred at Fountain Spring on Sunday afternoon'
last. Notwithstanding the inclemency:of :the
Weather the funeral was largely attended. There
were twenty - -eix, carriages in the yrocession.. •
altuyikill County' Military Organizations. —ln
Adjutant General Rnesell's Report for 1866, the
following are given as the military - organizations of
1 SCIMILIZELL Corwrt--Srarn Dziostow. . •
.T.MCCDT.2.4 ZOVAVES—Captain; .johns L. Williams
First T ient. - , Christopher "Algot'' , Second Lient.
.
John E. Davia. - • .. • ' • •
. .
ASHIAND Tcrnitaira-Captain,
First Lied:, A. B. Tata; •Second Lient,. John
Gs►r-r ' ZonAvm—Captain, Frank R. Leib;
First .Lient.-, Bernard Reilly ; Second Lieut., F
'Lrseors Gukami--Captain, Philip B. Hugbeti
First Lieut., Evan.T.' Jones ;'Second Lii3nt.; Chas
. The Teta - Liquor Latn;—The new Liquor Lai*
passed by the last Legislature, fe by Tar the most
stringent ever enacted in Petrurrlyania. Among..
other things . it provides for the closing of all bars
and saloons after midnight,- and entirety on San- .
day ; makes , it' the duty oithe constables and po
lice to arrest every person found in the 'public'
streets or highways:intoxicated, 'whether disor- -
derty or not ; ntterly forbidethe sellinfror. giving
in any way of ale, or beer, is well as of.stiranger
liquors, to minors ; authorizes any child of any, pa..
rent to forbid the sale. 'of .whiskey: and cham
pagne -to his father; - anitmakes it the bounden
duty of all .sheriffa,. constables and officers-end:
members of the police, to comPerthoobearvance
.of all its provisions. The law .re inipartaat and
there is scarcely any one whe is. not personally in;
terested'in Its
. provisions. Allgood citizens should
See that its provisions are 'enforced and the law
- Persons should beer is mind the . impotiMi:
fact that when barrels containing distilled sprnta,.•
off, or other article subplot by law to tax, .are
emptied,. the inispectionmarks should be effaced.
Violation of this prOviedon.'ret - niers i - pereini .
to a penalty. Am obsertanee-of this law i s fee.. Trendy neglected'iwe direct the attention of .p.rir
smut interested - in .this. matter 'to: the 'following
motion orthe Internet Reienne :Laws; -with the'
statement thatthe strictly:enfurbe
its Provision in the'fnturef- • - • •
"Sao. 22. And be if further 'enacted,. That it shall be
the duty of every permit limo modes dedzaws off, or
clones to be emptied or •drawo off. Metaled ..POlrlo', er
• other articleiluttiect.lty law to tae , from a cask. barrel,
or package; bearing any .Of the marks or,brands re.
(L obed hyisw, or marks intended for or-carport:Ma - M.
be, or deigned to We the 'effect essiclimarkettrune-,
Mealy upon spat ca.*, barrel. etspackage being =pt . ,
tied,-to efface and. oblitentte said Mirka ` or brands : :
and any cemott.artto stall • violate tills prortelou shall=
. be liable to irmaillty of ten :dollars: for' eaclilafilmee
mud wench carX lerreli - Or illlchaftk from. Whiclissid
mark not soeffscbi and aldtterated as herein re
, nu ma bett - sbill be ilableto - trfehriftt__ .-1 001.10/17.___ .Ite Whet
by any officer Of Wisp* reveille winevrer regno.l •
THE miNEits .s . J - UNE 1, 1867.
•
. . .
• i As Yeti* aims - at. Oncrt Fridsy,
nit., the argum«nts 'in the cote of - the poram,aiL
• wealth ie... the judges of the: Common Pleas. Of
SchttylkM County; were beard by the Pkinsvlia
nia Snprpme Court, - it Ritriaburg, Chief Audios
Woodward and Suf.tices Thompson, Agnew and
Dead on the 'bench .." large . number of legal
gentlemen Were present; together with a nUmb . r
of balsa. The -question at ieime , vras the consti
tutionality of the act creatiog it new Court for the
District .conipored of timphin,.' Lebanon and
Schnylkdi counties. . . . . . "
The ease was-argued on behalf-of the-Governor.
and his appointments, very ably, by , Attorney
General Brewster and Branklin B. Gowen, '7l.
'They were opposed by P. W Hughes of this Coup;
ty and by R C. hfcMurtrie of Philadelphia.
On Monday morning last the Supreme Court
decided that so much. of thq. act of Assembly as
gave etchisive jmistlictinit to the new Court; is .
unamatirritional, and that the old court still ex
ists, and can proeeed to try cases. The-.question
of-concurrent juneitction, was not decided; The
written °Tinfoil of the court will not be delivered
.until its meetingsat October neit.
. .
Taptome of a Locont.give Bo4er—One Mon
Rifted and .Sereral Severely' In jured.-On.flatnr‘
day last, May 25, iboutmoon, the' boiler of En
gine NO. exploded, a" abort' distance above tri
nersville "on the Mine Hill Bail Road' fatally injim.
.ing one man and severely injuring 'thrfe other
persona— The.engineat.tbetirpe of the.extoloaion
was not in motion. .The fireman ". Wm; ClonAe of
Cressona, was thrown about fifty yards away from •
the engine while his right arm was torn from.bite
body and thown almost as far in the, pposite di.'
.rection. - ' Be died in consequence of-the Injuries
received; about an hour after thd accident.; 'The
engineer of the train was not on the engine at the
time, bat stood close byand was bally scalded on
tbis face and heal but otherwise received no injti-
Two persons, Henry Gibbs and Pat licAvoy,
not employed with the engine, but merely specta
tors, were also scalded, one of them being thrown
away about 30 yards; the latter a boy, is so badly
hurt that be is not expected to lire 'Deputy . Coro
nerNertgardt held an inquest during the after
noon anti evening, and a careful examination of
the boiler was made by practical machinists, but
the Cantle of the explosion could not be ascertain
ed.. The jury therefore, rendered a verdict in ac
.cordance -with the facts. • . .
'Mr-Claude was,39 years of age; a man of most
excellent - character, and leaves - wife and four
children. He -formerly resided in Orwigdnirg:'
His remains were interred at Cre:sonann bit:beds:3;
last, 'attended to the grace- y a large concourse
of friends andrelatives. .
Eilinger tt.• Foote's ConthiPation:—this troupe of.
Wonderful little . people and 'musicians will give a.
series of their Levees at-Union Hall, Monday eve-
ning and Tuesdayand Wednesday, afternoon and
evening, June 3.1, and sth. • .
The following notice is from the Baltimore Ga
.
our experienceby no means a lim
ited one—we have never come across such an ex
traordinary and novel . exhibition' as that. Of
.fflessrs. - Ellinger & Foote, the first performance
of which was given in the spacious Hall of the
Maryland Institute,' lest evening. fact,
a rare combination; by which the curiosities of all
classes may be gratified, while the finer feelings
of our.natrire . are pleasantly refreshed by straina
of harmony that fall ravishingly upon the. ear. ,
Never before, perhaps,. was a combination of so
very diminutive people thrown together. Com.
Foote and a diminntive little crernre known as
the Fairy of the. West,' must taka precedence of
all pretender 4. Theae .wondeiful curiosities, as
slated by. Col. Small snd a talented musical coth
pany, form a combination, which for real merit is
excelled-by none." . • •
.The little people are accompanied by WM. H..
Harrison, the celebrated comic and extemporane
ouspoet. l3rooka: the blind' pianist and vr
elinist: .'Profaster .
the wonderful hay-a:mai
clan and other talent... The troupe will appear at
Aabland on Thursday, .June 6th, afternoon end
. -Melancholy Case . or_ lii•o?rning.—The heavy.
rain of Sunday lastfilied Norwegian Creek:to the
top of ire banks with water, and On Moridaymorn;
ing•the strea re rushed with great rapidity through
thellorongh bearing away anything that opposed.
its progress._About it o'clock as 'George; son Of
John Wilderinth, of this Borough, aged t; years.,
was on his way to i4ebool, he attanped'th cross
the stream -near Deree foundry, on a-simile log,
thrown across. While nntlie- Iltg . the whistle Of
an approselting - loertinotiye startled him; be lost
his balance. and fell' lute - the:turbulen.,- rushing
water. He was ffistantly carried under the UMW- ,
tug at.. that point and .down. towards tire 'sluice'
uonstmetek to aid in enlverting the - Creek.. On
the low bridge opposite Church Alley; an attempt
was made by e'en.. nil men - to catch the boy, but
he. was carried dtwn by theOowerful current at
that' point, beyond their reach ..,He arose AO the
surface 'below the- bridge;•was 'throngh
the sluice,. sniff:Malty dis,pp-eared in the Culvert
which runs from Union, street to - the - Schuylkill
River.. Hie body was seen to pass-into-the River
and sink, since - - which time. all efforts te reCover
it -have been fruitless.. B-uh -dams below.. the.
Borough *l - eiVe been repeatelly dragged without
finding the body.
:It.' will be a source of - sritisfaction• to our citi
r.ens when this Creek' is - securely quiverted its en
tire length in the Borough.' As it iirdtesv i it is
not only dangerous uhen -*a have heavy rains,
.hot it is a great uniSance to Property-holders.on
Railroad' street, 'whose cellars become filled with
wareron the occasion of every freshet,
.which
our narrow valleys are P.reipient occurrence.
Ikealli 'of Major -I%l,ra?if s un .
day afternoon last M 'jot E. E. Eland, one of our
oldest and moat highly esteemed Citins, died at
his residence in this: Borough,. aged. 114 years, 11:
months and 19 days. . -
.His ft:Moral took place on Wednesday morning
laat; The - 'remains were interred in the Presby
terian Cemetery, followed to the gt•aVg by bie old
compaltions-Inarins; of the National:Light In
tawry,- and by a large *concourse Of friends and
relatives:: '
On Monday evening last the aiiemh6 - of the
National Light Infantry. tonic. the tollowino ac
tin th 4 dPatli ZlL.jor Bland -
In . accordance with public notice given - to that effect,
the surviving members of the National .r,i2.tit Infantry
'met at the L stun Dotal on Monday evening-, May nib,
to make arrangements to attend the funeral of their late
commander, Major Edward E. Bland. -1 •
,lames .Beatty, late: Lieut . . Corn , was called'to the
chair, and Peter F. leindey an . old member 'of the Com
.pany, appointed Seeretary. - ' •
Messrs._ L..Wometsdorff, - D. J. Ridgwite, -Wm.
-Jame; M. Beatty ,and Peter P. Mudey were
made 'a Committee - on Arrangements and owftegoln
nods, and'D. t. Ridgway Marshal.. • .-* •:
Adjourned to meet again on Wednulay the 29th inst,
at Union Hotel, At 9 o'clock. A. M...; thence to pro:
teed in a bode withmoarniugbadge upon the left atm,
and in white gloves to attend the funeral of theirworthy
and efficient late commander from his late residence.-
' • - , Jaure M. BOTTV.:'
Prr. a F. Munav,:Secreta,y
- The Committee on Resolutions reported .the-follo‘i
ing which.were nnantmonoly adopted: '
Witenzas; We have heard of the death of lifajdr
ward' Bland, one - of . the original members of the
National Light Infantry, for 'several ye ir?,.its efficient,
and highly esteemed commander; and 'fur neariy.forty
years a prominent. oitiienaif Schuylkill C' gutty.— . • • •
Taxan-oat, Be it resolved, that we the retualtiing
'members of the National Light' Infantry feel It azi in.
'cum-bent duty to express by our public acia, the. a it
row we feel for the loss of • ur late commande-, whose
character as a citizen and soldier made him reapvted
in lifeand lamented irt-death;
R EMILY Kn. That we siniterelyeympatiiir,..
bereaved family, and relations in their tate:ion.
Bee /TN ED, That a copy t.f..the.eprocceliffett and recto=
lotions he transmitted to the family of. the'deceased:
and that they be published in the ptpers of the - County,.
• The following is a bf of sketch of 91 . .j9r Bland's
lOng and useful. life:. ' • • •
He was born in Hnion •Tewusbip, Itetks Co.;
June 7th . 1802. His taller died wheelie. 'iris
fifteen months old. - He Was.reared 'to the Agee('
seven years tinder the kind gnardianelisp-Of a stop- .
mother; He;was then placed under the care of
his uncle - until he reached tbe age of twenty-one,*
learning in the meantime the general sruitlchnsi.
ness. At the age of twenty-cour he was married
to the wife-Who survives: him. He worked several
years at 'his trade at a place called 'Joanna Fur
..
nace inDerks
. county.
At the age of twenty-one" he panned throtigh
- what is now the beart of -Prittaville on a visit to
his mother who resided at - that timo in NeviCeb..
nrobia on the tittegneh inns river.. Centre street,
was then one vast_- wilderness.; game of all kinds
alinninled ; a - simple beaten cow path. Was the
only -guide to trevol: and the Norwegian Creek
was an' elegant - tront, stream. -.nri 1831 he moved
to Pottsville and ideated on the island 'adjoining
the:present furnace. - At that time the biland'ivas
a fine green meatlew;*and had no:furnace.
• Very
few buses were built at that time is - Pottsville,
and Morris'' Addition bad no existenee.• Major
Dland.conimented working 'at hie tratle,,at once,
gradually increasing lne capacity as .the trade
warranted. Ho improved and :ornamented his
property from time to time, He continued working .
at his trade until 1840, When he formed .a 'eopart.;;*
nership with D. Schollenherger, decd, in the-
After the decease of his. partner lie confirmed
the business ajl, a for several years. His general
health aerionsty impaired by heavy lifting-and
hard work in the woods, 'resulting in a disease-of
the liver and kidneys, from whiCh !letterer hadanf
temporary or permanent relief.: lie joined the
National Light,lnfantry, as a. private in 1832,
serving for several -years under the Able and effi
cient discipline Of ()apt ' He was made a
Lieutenant and afterwards Captain of.the com
pany which position he retained for severary4rs.:
During his r6gime with the company he per
ftirmed some arduous and satisfactory service in
suppressing riots and wtiordistarbances incident.
to a. newly dev. loped ' conntrY. - Service at that
time was considered'aranous whenever the Mili
tary were called out sf•er'night"and especially - in
the winter season:: -Be was Maier of the battalion
for two years, serving in that-capacity during the
"memorable encampment held on the old . camp
ground in .PotteYille. The. .efficiency.in tactics
and general military excellence attained. by the
Infantry under his command was only ton well
attested by the interest and 'attention extended to
the family at his decease. . • . . •
Hewes, genermie to a fault, :giving to everv!
thing. as liberally its his means w,:uld allow. Pub
lic 61 - nrited to a dcgretith4t challenged admire.'
tiOn, he never lolled at any - obstacles when •re
motel could be effected by hard blows. Ile lived
see numerous .eviderces of his assistabee rise
'to a degree of emin.nce; that.never dieconiaged
him when not receiving hie hard earned interest:
He enjoyed the confidence of a largo . circle of
friends throughout. the County ";:in: in fact he . was
Vet/ generally knoWn and had .triany very near
. . .
- -
In 1856 be narrowly escaped :being killed by -a
blow on the head from a passing. car. He was rem.
.dered while- his bleeding &alp was
laid open to the extent of seyen inches on, one
side of the head and'three inches .on the opposite.
In -the winter of '63 he was a witness in the. Acker
case, and while in :Philadelphia at Miller's 'hater
was attacked with palsy while reading a Morning.
paper. From this 'be-neve.r 'effectually recovered.
'ln:December, '65, and February, 'O6; he had two
_additional attacks; and-on-Alonday morning, the
20th of Maylast, at ten minutes before seven, while
seated in a rocking chair be , was again attacked;
lingering rnatil Sunday, the 2603, 'when death re
lieved his s u fferinge at 2} '
Thus his passed'from time to eternity a :man
and a citizen whom we - all retmected.for his many
'estimable qualities of mind. and heart.- ".‘ ... • .
LFTTEU FROM 1114,11141.N01t
' • ern, May MO, 1867;
Enflame Huai. Jeoarrat :,CinSaturday. evening,of last week, the Rev. Thoe . P. Bunt finished a corium
of fonr ler:tares in this place,- on -tile Temperature
reuse 7 -mneh to the emisfireilon of ' the:true . ..friends -Of
that came, who d• light to bear the truth spoken's:rut in
unverniabedinenage. - - Bat there are some who
are not very well pleased with: whath. has thasei
who are-Interested in the traffic: are filled' with
anneri ludiunation and I may even say,..with • amere ,
meet to think that a man dared to. stand up in public
'sod denounce the profession ite. be; baa done. -`Se;
Ought kr be hand, the old scoundrel," of, "Milted him
here:- I . - would-pound his old.. grey .head for
and such like expremiciew are need in regard- to' hint—'
infant- to news very forcible erprearrion of his own, he
bas made them.. erlassi:...c - • •
The leeterrkpasiiedeff •very ?leartntly. and ihe
g lo_Rami nsed more etB~teptij
In the.promotion of the Temperance cause. PatbesA
Rant make",,,e..display in the way of flowery oratory_
but his arguments are pondemna., and So plain (Hutt
• they_cannot be mistaken: be. Is always twthe•pointi..
andeern'y word tells., He has also got thetact - brunt.:
ttoean anecdote exactly Where it is needed to thus,
tratabis sublect.- He wills long ~be remembered in,
idahanoy by all puttee.. By the Meads of ITemPer....l
ante,'as a venerable but powerful' .champion of estr . -]
cause, and by the frleinis of Intemperance as . one who'
' has hid bare to pnblic,lnspectlom . thataystem which
ia" Anima, Maltase and death
.throughorit the . '
lan ,May God In •
love, long spare . the good old
man for the benefit oft& race - • ..
/unarmed:lon with thismattesOettne thste that the::
Temperanceehois added.muchtothe pleasure of the
mullences by their,exnellent singing. • •-
- At the Thursdly evening lecture, Mils VictoriaPriee; .
a - you s zr of ten year* of ago;sang that touching.
&drunk:are and inothei Is dead,"
Insuch excellentstyleasealled' forth. the admiration
of th e audienc e : • .., She pneserees. 4 .3Muegthabe is, mt.:
cathadinnalcal talant.and audit to be oncouraged,
Atthe tesetthg ofLoyal thviskur, Sons of Temperance:.
pier!, a committee -xes appointed „to. procure . a
book to be cremated Wher.thr. an 'erponssion of their
weeklies' !Ober efforts, ; •
"AM= the arida) of drily:Hie contemplated tobirld •
n grand psradeandpleAde.of .thejriends of Temper;
anceth tide pleee.:at walak !Odle elx thoustad
sopeeted thattedd oft anowteArthiCloasita.:
• Tor%
.. • . • • "
LETTER .TBO➢I PARIS.
The AM 11 1seimiii6 of illie ,
...." 411 0:Tlielielirepaiis071 1 einee *flit
• .1 ill leit7=-111i0Olites: Lim.stme 1131 0 10, !i
.....?"I"rmaile.e-Atibe: time ..or.iin,wer•—;—.
•
The halite atipii die laiiiii!diguie,-T,ibe"
Patio* at . Wooster-101es
Ccoarrecor or Ter Ham, JouraiL .1 •
. • .. . .
• Theimitices and opportuMties fOramusement to the
People 0 ' We City are. alitrst . .thexturbittible.
.pleasarnsenkingseeina to be the pr . evalLityr • brialneas
that Pro-occinides every individual. .0f conrse, you tee
a sponlilirag tatavork . going on; metres houses b ittg
erected, old °nett pulled demur, .streetsbeing 'cleaned;
carte iciaded**ltt, vegetables and . ail Other /roarl,,Ei.
things, drawn about: in ei-6ry airectlari - Py 11410..don
keSs with belie, and'l am sorry to say. by *Omen. Yet
even Ple4' appear more likes. species of teeneation and
enjernentitien real labor. You see.a feliow.liniinidly
mi# l 2 Mortar With his hoe, and smoking his pipe at
the same tint!. 'mother cardet nacirtat not the
pipe—up In ihedbafte Tonith story of, tome building
.the while , an air from
F DiavOlot . or holding =interesting and lively chat
with seine one onthe sidewalk: :The . only time i . bare
ever
'see!? Pretretarten sweat was whea they were in th e
mid s t of e xciting argunieniatite convereationt :Wien
just as you think they are gOing to blow each other's'
bralns'oet,thei wind up With a laugh and muttial
Theitre-gobig is probably, More of 'an Institution'
here than anYwhere else in the ' . iyorld ; for, although
t he Prices of admiselonare quite as Web sa to Anieri:
.c=l, and Ma' rerannemtion ttir labor much tests : yet the
theatres-and' there are some . thirty 4* least--;sre
crowded nightly. and that too, with a rali•PrO ci rtlill
of the laboring classes,. It appears-to tha t
, they go
to th e theatre . to save the trouble of reading books.
and ePOSequaiitty, the ant.ht.tr and not: the actors of
. PI 3 Y- itandinpperniost fn peopfe', minda....Thns they.
you that they will go to thls.or that theatre in or
der to witness this or that new p'eth by Dames Ms. Men- •
:rihe..Of any other author: and Its success will depend -
ipon - whether.itte Well Written—its representation On .
the stage 'lt iatiaken for granted; will be correct: -•
Whsle cin this sibleen it ware as well" to give 'Some
;little Seri:motet thenew .oPera of IlOmetr , : and 'Juliet
(the.mnstcby donned, the conwnset of Faincthat was .
produced quitO recently at the Theatre Lyrippie. - • The.
whole Opera bears the. stamp of Bhakspearlin Matdre-',
tion, and adheres with stria tenacity to the original.—:
•
It is worthy ofthe composer of Faust, and 'rosy evert,
dit . Piece that production In the race for popularity. r•-an
deed:' it La aiready.said by competent critics, ‘that. there .
are passages in Barmen which surpass in richness and
mealy; the liut Yoacaicz in Faust: • PIC overture is
brilliant t when suddenly the . curtain rise!. =and the
.Capnlets; Monta;gues,..RoMeo: Julien Merentio, , the
Frier and the nurse sing. a chnrus without secompant.
- meet... The loie strains of the ha Icony Scene convey a
pathos: that 'Witches the heart.' The marriage certeacr:,
ny In the friar . .. Smell is beautiful In its sweet simplicity:
The Marriage afthrwards of Juliet with -the.bonntY
Parts is grand and inineting to a degree only equalled.
and not sinprased •ity - the.prpresaion and march in
.Faust, .or the Proithete. • The death scene by.thelomb
is made np Of . fragments of . the. love: passage:. •In the
preceding deete,''Sb skillfully .irovm together that no.
Objectioncan tie made to their tieing served ur, again:
Indeed, fhaveneVer • listened to
. music that has had'
such an.fittoileating.trieet over naY senses is. this opera
of Romeo and . . Juliet -Attire Italian Operal'Africaine
.is perfOrmed alternately with Don Carlos:- 'Once wit
nessed are Presentation of the Berner at Philadelphia,
and was 'not partlcalarly plemmd With in Whtther -it
he that it .production hereon a scan almost- In*-rrle
tons. Or Its greater .excelleade in range. or my better
appreciation of it on aseetted attendance; mit tin it
thatsometbiog has' greatly retOlutiontzert my opinion.
But I/africainnbas been . 06 frequently.. described, toid .
anyettempt on my part to depict its , perfrinnanee here
would:fall so far shorfof what it should be, that twill.
. •
Patinlar places of. resart- to. the Fart-inns are tie
CAP . F.II Whcrt' the TiliaAnrcts of ttie
palate are tls.9 nciafeil with thocertf the ear: to these
yon are on the outaide, s taltrthiCion
tb . .fcee but when Yon get within you are obliged to .
take a cap of coffee or a glaCs of beer, for which you are.
charged two francs,' In • one of these, the, klertiar,
Withesied—besiacs a great deal ofeecond•rate.singing
and . first , rate. thincinga 'Mar i ne Performance, the
way of a . . Young, poet, who._ came before - the' audience
a pike of white paper anda pencil ; he.thettbade,
the audience call out' ay word they wished, which was . -
done frmitt . :all parts of the Mince, '.and most 'in
congruous manner.. He wrote. these words dawn
the order theywere given at the end of every alternate
line of his paper - „and when he had a. 'Cage of mink
word, he filled Up the lilies eo as to make the whole
productl. in a jingle - Of rhymes, and it was said to be er-.
cellcut pnetry't ..Apoatrophlzingthe . sublime eenkw,
whispored intot.he ear,ormY American friend the well
known cluotation.... • '
etßhadeot the mlOtyl. can it he
That thieriq alt icaisia9lof thce
When he immediately-reeponde . i: ''ibat, chap on'the
platform wonld flay— -.• • •
'Gloat ratueof podtry ta or Tour.
rit. this all ill tiT s ..3 . LEFT OY i'ols
Irt . titese eafes.amid.vOlumis of smoke from the fri
grant ivied, the blouse and frock coat are conspienons.
interspersed here and there with a mualideap and me
rino gown, listening to the comic Scenes, or snatches
from favorite operas,; retailed to, the •atidiente by. tete
'performers. On the AVentie des. Champs time there
are concerts - or this deecription . , where the audience IS
nceomModnicd in the open air, and the Singes arc nn,
der elegant kiosks, gaily painted and adorned with
„
'The love of thweita among..he. pe - ople amounts tots
.pass[ tn parsons: their hoit.es, and every object
of love.is decorated .with aflowery vestment: Conse
quently, there are some Ave . or six. large flower Mar-.
kets, Cif.which which is held on the Place de la . :
Madeleine is one cr the earn:shies : of, the city. '; TfiCre,_
'on tnesdaYs and Pricloys,lthose 'het* the market
days) . ,ihe alit. redolent W;th the • intoicating aroma
that emanates fiom the vast quantity and variety of the
gems flora that are displaye'd'for purchase i mai 'many
are the flitie tokens of affection that are there Milled
And Assorted to convey mesaagee from one to another
and many the arch maiden and the sangniim youth vh . o..
may be there seen alorgbetw•eenthebeaotifal
he beant
bouquets, asking their prices: here and there; with a
burning, tell.tele - Clieeic and a - swelling heart—Abeatt
noeyet charred and blistered by the torrld'heats of ex•
hansted riassion, or, frozen by the ?wintry Winds of Ad,.
versify; but fall orJoy; full.of hope, full Of the glories
of a goiderilutgre, , • - .
.
Last Sunday was a great-day in the-Eels de Boulogne ;
.
it being a day appointeil for the 'racy to come nil; and
.
the weather bong extremely . warm and summer-like,
thenniands of people :were attracted' to that beautiful
spot, which may truly be mid to be the lunge of Paris •
Thy races were.tery exciting, and heti ingwas gOing on
to shocking extent:. Indeed: Ao one not used to such •
diweratiou ofthe Sablaitlii,thesuene-wee anything but.
,
agreeable.: The nuitaber of. grand equipages that were
preient Was perfectly astonishing, and yuch..a.. display
of sumptuous livery:and extravagant" v4inedage can On
ly.be appreilated by being seenwordican do no - ado.
quate justice to the- subject. Among these Was the
-Emperor himself, Who was - readily distiogaishable by .
ids carriage, thone other be,
the six horses attached to .
: fog allowed thstuumber) and by the - colors 'of his liv- .
. My, green and gold. Hardly inferior to the equipage
Of Napoleon_ h /Weyer, mere many others, owned hythe .
nobility, generale; ministers, plenipotentiary represen
tatives other nations, and by the wealthy citizens of
. . • . . . .
the - retern to - the city these carriage&co na ts.
. Anted: a close proceision of miles in length; and while it
was passing down the Avenue'de P.Empemtrlce, a man.
.
ascended - with a monsterballoonfroni thellippedrome
Close by, ,I think on the_ least calculation, there must •
have been fifty - thousand people 'out . at the -mete and
other parts of the woods of Boulogne; '• . •'• • .
The palaces at St. Clond,Fontalublen and 'Versailles::
. . ,
.also draw n great number from the eity . etery' day, not
strangers aho visit parle . licit to the extent of
itorethrt.r two thirds of the Parisiane themselvek-who
.never get ,done cooking at these mig,ntheent..pionti
.
mentsif art and beauty, but return to theM over and
over again; and'each one appears to takO se much in-,
•.•, i • . .
serest ha any one of the palaces, as fhe owned it him--
self,-and was its lordling t•tet the manor born:" When:
. ever the Emperor with
. 111 family occupice any one .tif
hierpany residences. - then the others are' all thronth
.open to Satisfythe eager C &lenity of the' 'and
.
the' foot of the stranger , may'; trend through 'all iheli
thorns, nor.is the Sanctity respected even of the cham:
bei of the Einprose...-Nevertheless; there is always an
- „and
ample guard of atagnifieently.tmlformed soldiers; who,
- -.
parade aboutin. :great ."pomp and eircnmstance
although one .may go everywhere and leak at every_
-thing. yet inner no condition is one allowed to teach'
anything. whatever: .
. • speaking cf the soldiers—what a great...lenient Attev
:constitute in Prance: and especially in Paris '. They
may.he-sein at all hours of the day °r ide - ht. singly or'
.to g roups.. and the ninny noir rms of the different arms -
• et : the service.' but all gay. and beast ma . predate
.a
-pretty - effect to the general sprinkling of them-through
the thickly crowded arrcetii • intice&„ thedress - ,ot th e ,
soldiers I, un exceptionable in regard to the e t eme -,, aar .
the fit andthe neatness and cleanliness in which . it Is!
kept. and What with all hie stripes and decoration.s mod
embellishments, a private soldier here locits moreger.;"
•na than Generni.Grant in fail uniform
2. ', Theti th e sergeants de ",1110,• or policemen, are - allot&
..... t . a r m entscently attired fellows, and-there. are'
iZZaay of them , tbstby the time - night;comes your
eyes pain yen from the everlasting blue costa andshi- ,
uy brass buttons that they have encountered'. during''
th e day... But it unite be said - .in connection with' this .
:subject, that the police, system is as hear to perfection
„ aa , aach a thing can be. I' hate been here almost . -a'
.month now,. and have not beard. or 'read of i single
. theft,,to say nothing of murder and robberies, hating:
been committed. Although there is doubtless a -great
deal of vice. yet -ctualiopen and .deflant.crithels very ,
rare. - This is the more apparent from the extreme.
.. are
associate d thFrenchmen'se Minds. -
. b erm e. with id of New York • and crime':
True. theft , eye.'
tem here is. Opc-of to-plan/we. and although . o no f e a t
a tr ie..,t eas. p r ne than in New :York, .for -instance; 'Yet
- one certainly feels a great deal more safe. Volta 1 the •
extent of this system:• .Yon arrive'at a hotel; bye and
bye the landlord giveslPA with a great deal, of polite , .
410, nay et racist and whether
. win. a carte to fill 'up blanks of 'which require
your name nativli-f,,, age
Occupttion;he t t residenc e ,.
.
how'ong You clod
a . farogner) yo u nave a passport: Thus - they know. all
. about you, and. know. exactly who . and
'strapgars are in the city:
. .
_ B es ides, there Is a certain mystery in everythingthat
lay.
"-tizii9.-; Thus yen come.
home from . and find the door or
raw i n ehed, ' You ring the bell; and Instantly
Unitijoortlea open, de if . some magic "sesame" -had
• been proneurisedt You areAdnied- hut yow.tible:
'and posh the door, Which mewl With a. sharp ctitk:
no person whatever,. but feel that' you haVe
' C W let into the, house by some: horrible - French -
. c hi m akm. Vital!' down in - yotti own room in Itang u i l it..
:Int contemplation. wondering whether *da te h en temk
• will be clapped ontoltita face soon. Anoth er ray . ten ,
i s to know when the petrple4tor whether they While
go to .hed.: • I .bave come from the theatre at . one.
(m ee t a t night;.-they- r arelY let out earlier, -and -found
the boulevards just as crowded, and the eafes as noisy
:and brilliant and fans during any one - e t .the
twenty
. f our boars. I:entered ?MO of them, . - to lit t l e 4,
de Wm and smoked nwar;tldnking I wont 4 I„..ttand
And ma the Parisian bed time: , Mit at IWO o'clock' r
: m ow npthetonteat'and r . e t*l.thiaelf nenviere than.i
was before ..
I ,Xt t a t r ia t i e be rp e op eiree le dritk. bl / 2 wile" '
It me to e tcs -win me; li thst emni ll
fife entiresurface of the earth was planted w i th
vines, and there ziever,evas a Mere In .tire.
cow bat produce grapes enough to stfueeze all the - lathe
Oct of which Is consumed' here.
• "Youwait Int o a tee!• tareart tor your.dinudert the hit thing the li tomma y,
asks is,vanal awn of wine. you - have; and: w e
l ot at ti n wy en ,.ertth have. wthe at all; and when• told
aaiia. he. seems paralyzed: ivith„.atitonbiluttemt. 'and
'looks with such en of pity Miktinernisenv
Almi.thaZyou drink a bottle;of Ifedoc ton:Ste:the pe r
boy's HAL. - To tell thethe.trath . , , :tanreter;nth e Inter
that one gate here is not fit to. driathit obtained
ildog but
froni-thisSeine.-And'aft
.pleasmiL wi 3 igh • Alftele t. d; thejtasociation:
iny • -
• In coerce of time it is hoped that,
bidet weal taisuPpl the water'in
ree_the sty. Allende at the Boli de it,
a.wellof tkis lard: bat Ptiadiatela very large "
:water: it nr, 1-bellevin the deenest Ia idle pylitth
threeteeptionnotthat-in-Crehrobna,_ •
het. that the water.iLtudist : waif qt
traitira
• snap
Iri . th
hir=trellWl
akar latemenei 1 thi
•,.
hietWithohea.Patiend WS'
• letter;esEs it a light and Antal. agaktfiniffamdanil
'.wbacesigeddr.one wow ggistra an t,:nel34 -
- jeC.t al A* l l s /POITO PFICI t • .- •.
The Greatreinale Remedy. - c .
. . ps ! DEPONCO'S
catiiDEI,PERIODICAL.
• .
. , . . .
Picrazlnks Comorrriko Tazzotrwcrinas, Etzvorafe.
.•Osznrarxosß or cm Timm, •_
ALWAn SUCCiCSPATL , SA d niEVEMTIVX
- ONE,Prn IS_A DOSE.
. .
Females peiudierly situated , or those eupPosing them
:seises eo, 'are ammionedbmiest tieing these Pills while
in that condition. lets they Amite mleewriege, after
which admonition, the Proprietor 'asturaes 'no rekesti
- eibility, althatet:i, their .mildness would toe=
thief to heahh, otherwise the Pipe:are reco
plias, may 13. 1.361
• 'HOST fl VA.T.,HABLE REMEDY FOR '
...• • MO Lencorrira, Or Witten, - ,
And in Heraoiingbbstnictionu Reatorine- Nature
• to its Proper: Channel, Quieting the- Nerves
tintbringim - baCklbo"Rogy color of. Health"
• to the Omer ot the:moat delicate:: • • •
-• • -
• PrieoS Pee Be:: - Biz Boxes $5 . •'
Sold - inrott :147t0n..50i" .
.Arent :Centre St. -. • •
Indies by seirlint 0010 Pottsville Poet Office can
hare th e . pills wilt (confidentially.) by . Mail, to any pert
of- the country. "tom a motlige:!!„, ;.. • .
•• Sold alio - SYH. N.-COSE, :Schuylkill Haven. H. B.
OAF'S, St Clair, . And by JOUNSI)N.- HOLLOWAY .
k.COWDBN. Wholeaale Agenta,..Ftdadelphia. •
Jane 1, , 81 • • : '. •',.. • 2:2,u1n."
• • .
-P EMIL Y • CH 0 •
STAR Ci.onin4coNroicirw. Nn. Cauriiirr - Srpantr,
:•pors F. I Xlll,. PyILADi'LpulA. • , • ,
UrSaniiiles. witb toriees•sent by. mai weil deiired;
free of cbartre, and entire sstirfactton guaranteed: •
••• .COLGATE• 6:. CO.'S
• -N,C %. GERIVIAN
&Ca " . ERASIVE.:SOAP
<sirr,4k- I..lircronfactnreri ficrm Prßr Mw=
y ‘,) and uleY be: contridered
4 the STANO.t.RD or EX.OELIZZOI.—
. For ale by all Grxere
. 2,l eY• 1g a 1. .: . • . • . 2C-1y
. . . .
• tar A "gookeig Ludy returiing to her country
borne, after a sojourn Of a few:monthslit the city, was
hardly _recognized by her blinds.
.place of a coarse,.
castle,. dashed face, she had a wit, ruby compleilon of
almciet marble smoothness, and initdad of.twentpthree
she really appeared rut eighteen.. Upon - inquiry as to
VT. cause of so great a change; she - plainly told .them
that sheisedthe - CrACASSIAN - BAL*,".andconsidei r ed
it an invainabioacquinition to any lady's tolickw By its
Use ally lady or - gentleman esn improve their personal
Appearance an hundred fold: It is eimple in its-combi
nationots nature herself by simple; - yet tinstirpassed
Its efficacy drawing imparities - from,. aleo healing, •
cleansing and beantifiing the skin and enmplexicni.--
By its direct action On - the cuticle it draws from it all
Its impolitic% kindly healing the same, and leaving the
surface as : nature intended •it should be, clear, soft;
smooth and beititifnl; Price. $l, neat by lien ocHti-.
Press, oh receipt of an order, by • -; •
. •W. CLARK Et CO.,•Cheinlitt9 '
r • • NO. 3 WeetPayetfe et, Syracu::
• .
. . .
• . A Gentleman who suffered foe years' from Nervous
.Debility. Premature Decay, and all the effects of-youth;
luiindi.lscretion,•*lll for the sake of anderinghturisni-
Av..send free trail who. need it, the recipe and direr
tions. for making the simple remedy by which he was
Par , d. Eufferers.wishine to nif-flt thdfulvertiscr's
eafierience, can' do so by addressing. in perfftt confi
dent., 301I\ B. OGDEN', 42 Cedar Street, New Turk.
We ttrO Selling
ken's all wool ems Businft.sCoats as low as..
.$5. 00
" ••• Pants • t! • 3 . 00
. tt ; ' Vests •", ". . . 200
, . - whu;e Suits $lO 00
.
• 'Better • • .- • •Coats fors.... . &00
" • • " • Pants 850
*".` " • • .vesh , ." 50
• " • "' Whole . Suits " ' $l2 00
"Coats." ... - 300
" " • Pants •••• 400
`! " "
Vests " 3,00
.
The garments we are rapidly aellir.g at ahme-ramed
prices are all good; well made. and "ecrvicOlhle. well
adapted to business or ordinary oear.S• The prices are.
lee , than half those far which same goods More been
Advancing: roin these. we have all grades up to the
finest, oreneli and English febria., which are sold'at
,prowetlonafely- lOw• prices. are Surpassed' by none . In,
style or At, and -made with, especial care--the small
qnsntity of elothl , g manufactured generally this .sea
sot, having elven' us an Minimally good•ehance.for.
ee
.lectieg bur workmen from the best In the city. - 'Oar
goods - have' all been purchased - for cash from manntae- -
tarers and importers at_tar lees than cost,'whlett ena-.
bles us to sell at the low -pikes named. ,
• Boys' Department.We ere selling' '
, •
Boys' ea.-Wool Ctu3stmere - C.Oats as low as •-$2 00
Pants. " 2 00
•. "Whole Snit:
" . Better " • Coa,a'
" Pants "
. . .
' • •t. Whole . Snit • 's 7 CO
And all finer grades at prices egnallilowLtriade and
trimmed in the best manner
.from a choice twice' ton of ani t able fabrics. .Our Boys'..goods are all on the first
floor. nearest the front, convenient for ladies. • •
" . We have the largest establishment for the mandate-.
.inre and sale of.clothing.in Philadelphia; occupied ex
cht.lvely by ourselVes and filled wt. h the largeat stock
at d moat complete ft.sortment in the city. •
guarantee oni.pricea lower 'Mari the lowest else%
where or the sale caure4blind"thuneyrefanded: •
• HAT,P.WAT DETWERN EtzNliitTT & CO.; •
AND . TOWLT.BALL
Scam STIIERTB, .• , 518 I.l.Anum. STRICP.T.
.
Note.—We have recently renovated and refitted our
estAblishnient, 'and introduced a vastly. increased
amount or light by a neip process, the effect of which is
.well worth seeing.. May 11, , GI 19.3 m
PREPARED .OIL OF PAill
.;.. i . fo r • Pir . ;esiery in g, - .lCeslOring an 4
. .
. . .
. . .
And le th/ Most dellghtfhl and wonderful . artlCle-the
world ever produCod. '. '. ; ' • .
••• ~ .
..Ladles will-find it not only a certain remedy to Re
store, Darken and Beardifythe Hair, but alio a desira
ble article ith:ttie;Tollet,.as it is liighliPertumed with
a.rich and delicate perfume,• independent of the Irk
grant:odor of the Oils of Raltn. and - Attice. ' '• .
THE PIARVEL OF'PERU.
'.A new and beantiful perfume, „which in delicacy of
scent, and the tenacity: with - which It clings to tho
handkercide and 'person IT unequalled. '•
The above arileles for sale-by all ttrnr.Ma and Per
fumers., at $1 per boille each.: Sent by express to any
address by proprietors. - ' -
• s T. ly.' As CO., •
100 .Liberty street, Ner ,
..00,ober 20..'116 . • 42-ly . •
•
~. . . .
Deaths - Cote; Blindness and•Cstraish; . treated
with.the utmost success; by ISAACS, M'.ll,.Ocultet
and Aurist,* (formerly of Leydett,.. : Bolland.l No. 519
PINE Street, • PHILADELPHIA. - - Testimonials from
the most. reliable warm.' in the CItY-anci•Crifintry can
be seen at, his office. ' The Medical faculty are invited
tosecompany their patients, as he has no sesr,te in hie
'practice. 'ARTIFICIAL EYES:inserted without pain.
No charge for eramtnatirm. • May 4, .57-4940 m •
. • .
• VIEW MARRIAGE - .
•
The Cheapest Book . ever -
Containing nearly Three !Hundred Pages
. . .
And lad fine Plates and Engravings of the AnatOmy of
thelitiman Organs in a state of Health .and plsease,
withi Treatise on_Earlyi Etiore, its"- deplorable conse.
guences upon the Mind and • Body, with the anthors
plan of treatment-the only rational .and successful
mode, of Cure, as Shown by - the repOrt of cases treated
A nuthfil adviser, to the • markiedi and those contem;
plating ,marriage; who entertain doubts of their physi
cal condition. Sent free of postage,.to,any address' on
receipt of 2ti cents In stamps Or postage currency, by
addressing DR. L.A. CROIX, •
NO: 31 Maiden Albany, N. y. .
The. author maybe . consulted upon any of the die
eaies upon which his booktreata, oither.personally. or
by mail, and medicines sent to any part of the world?: .
Jan, 12; • ' • •
••• • •• • cc • • •
• A - • Cough; Cold, Or Soire
• ~ OWC,' • • • • • •
L b dim • •• • Thni • •
BRONC"'L'L
.2, <,./•• .111417i8E3 n vuas ATTIMMOIc /UM
• 11110131 a SE canxiazo, • 1; sr, • .•
COUGHS • *:
44vrip '
"
ANo Ifeeiiation.. of •the • langs,..is
PermartiintThriont
nu) - pease, ov . ....Coasaaapt- ; •
IB=OFTEN,TH&RE ULT.'.
''.'.2l . 24•Ncrzrs•346Nri4r.. TRocrnics
• iL.A.1124 ' 42A:D1Rii324 . 61FL1381102 TO,l7llCPlBri. ,
' °Eva utuxou.T.E „exults.
.
For ..Bironchi till; Asthma, - Catiirrh,
Coit
eamptiYe=aAd, .
.11100H88 , Altt IIM! wrrri ALwAys,pooo,scroona
SINGSIt9 SIT.MCERS ".•
will Pia Trachi , s *ern! In eleariPk*"-YOce..*whOilia
hen. before.singing or
,Speaking,; and reyerieij
throat after an unusual exertion of , theyoOar Organia;;:
The Tinaies'itifirenonuttentbid and '
ii.oana, and have had testimonials tenni: eminent ; men
thronghout the conatz7;' *lag an.articie of tree:Meriti
and bating nroled'.peh.: efficacy .bi teat 01;irtP1
years, "ettaltYearlindeltheni in new I.Oca3hiee innTariOna
parts of the world: and..the Troches are. nniiiiiilly
mann:nava better. than other
. .
OirniErfonlispiviCa .13aciribuutl"..and d •
not any of Wortt4auirm t liatiotte flint may be
- ."
I :>o 3l aber
, .
B:ll' . ,.77;loistiriNHAT; tbe igiisi.ll4llah
trologist, Clairanyant and Tarbrunetricitae, who. has
1156161*i:ion enleedrlc dames or the World, but
now' located it 111:444; iiadigie *wiz .
ton maiming Each wonderful powersOteecond
as to enable her to Impart Imoirledgq Of 'ilia greateit
importance to' the 'single or ; marrie d
While ins statdof trance; ehe.deleenteri the.yer7
*ftieCcif the s person yon are to*arpvaila!ly the md of
en - instrument Of intense sower: known as tite;PriyaiS
moti*iictEdulinteeis to lavdnee a life•likeidittareOf
the future hi:Aim:fin. wife of 'the: eiplic*, to**
eilh ii of marr[sge, Peigtien to life;lelding_triltivf
'chewier:4w :up, fronnting, 11191011:141(4
Inetimonlehrriattricert.- She. will= said wherLibuditil
i.niddifindl*Mt*,et tflarlienietii*that
vicuFe 01,*---ACimet*N:iio4ll
•
lode of ha* EllO 'lltAtittg: Owe of instkat dispoldP
lion and . einnignlnn; and 0191,11iCAPS":,:coVP
eli*Pe . 61 4airPid . to: rxiii?illiac4:.4tAte
sdve tbej piettie -and tiptnimhdoilission by Eat=
.111 4 } ;:*** 11044 * I. :**/77 6) 0 6 KtireV ,A*
4+.e o gidialite; : lt&DllCOO*OW* ,
.o:,BcfOldkiltideorCN. '..4 l eibilh'ir Gay.-
;14 1 .4 11-r eV *AM?"
.j l . ll t2 ls t 4 wAtOPL
IgeereamMt Light
French an - Trittreet, • ••
rts 41141111110410 ,
re. and,
Wrioelifloolf*a
ea to their Meth/W.
cal Reetedleovr-ctentitne 4 brineet "w.a.m with'
AlliellingtaLgoll4 l .4 l
Sr-tllllollolotbdble '4l 4
:11.4 ICfi.4
ClOcriprontlat •I. • ter .
Ffigt4,
FOR FE=tES.
NIONS. JOSEPH ZALEKFV,
FRENCH TAILOR,'
ERRORS OF F.OFTII.
" Whole Spits "
Beauti'fying the .llrtiri
iwa PIIVSIOLOGICAL
mow Thy
_ mixes.
• .
'k Sar..Ta for Barna, Scalds, Scrofula,
Salt:Rheum, *ma proisea.arimu,i, Frost Bites, Chll
- Cu* SielUngs &c.. whetter
upoll.7Aan or tome: is the radat;.wondarfut ar*o ever
produced. • Other good artlchgl alleriaM: this cures.=
IL altari *situation, subdues sidii.`ii4 hash irtt& .
°nip war. It is worth its' weight . in gold to any fami.;
IN and should shawl* on hand; :It le warranted tb
do what it says every time.:
Nettatt , e•LifalPiik an4l"Phentt Bitters
were drat treed in private practice in 1525 . . • They were
'introduCed to the public in 1535, since. which time their
reputation has extended; until they have a. radii in
remit other Cathartic and :Partivh3g
Theis is hardly/ fondly among Hvitfied nations _ ttu!.
have not.personal pride:nee of their beneficial effects.--
Their great nowise is owing to BieIS.II2IORM reliability •
to sere• of Constipation; Bilious , and Stinimehic Dimi
ng, Whether of !ong or Aunt duratiob. They are en
tirely vegetable in their composition, end harmless 'to
'the gentlest Infant. One ingredient opens the pores of -
the- ICU; &tether diuretic, and atittudides laoPec
action of the kidneys; a third la emollient; loosening
phlegmmtd humor troth the, lungs; other properties
are warming . and cathartic, and ciranie the stomach
and bowels frons unhealthy secretions: Their corn:
bitsed - effect is. to regulate the:impaired functions of this
system, and to produce
.stratirr. It la. not asserted.
Moflatt`s Fills are a. crat-att---that they will cure all
complaints—tett' under ordinary circumstances the
may tie relied Jupiou to cite Nervous And Sick Read
-
Mite; Costiveoess; Ilysneptda. Indigestion, Jahiidlos.
Liver and Bilious ComPutints,,Coldsc Bourvy, General
Weakness, Ace. They. are.estsessly made for these
diseases; Mahone uPon miltiona of cures can. be cited:
bl no singielnstance hie a coMplaint ever ovine to our
knowledge wheie they Alive not operated as recom:
.
the printed circular stout!' each ' boi. fully cl - plallut
.
the. symptoms and.' ele cts "of each disease, speddes
.treatment, furnishes evidence. &c •
'We 'briefly refer to Rev, David Elder, Prielditt:'N
C„;'who was mired of Dyspeps . itt. 0, R. Cross.,of The;
(Ake: DI.; -cured of Liver Complaint. H. Hoolby. of
SPrinefleld, Pa., bad Scrofula, and bad to use crutches;
Was cared in three. weeks.. Jamie D. Dolens. of Adri
an, 3116., cared of 121111 one 'Fever. Rev. Henry Gra,.
hairt,'Prmtyterian Church, :Ga ninagna, Cal., of Fever
and Agile. .Iter. Rd. IL Hay, Tiventy-flrat New'York.
of Rheumatism and Piles 'of.2s' years standing.
Samuel Bowles. Editor of tbe .prinefielgeadase.) .
publican; was eared of terilblet 'Costiven s. Hon. Rd.
Webber, of Romney, N. H of. Liver Complaint; etc.
A liear. of Maffei.' Life Pills, with full cirenbus,
will be, sent gratis to any Phksician or Clergyman, on
the receipt of two three cent postage stamps.-
. Moffat's Life Pills are 95 cents per bor.' 31.offaVe
Monis Bitters, $1 per bottle. They are Bold by all re
spectable. dealers -throngheat the continenta 'and the
islands of the 'ocean. • .
. WHITE & HOWLAND, Propriebna.
. .
- easOra to Dr. John 11(iffit and Di. Wm. B. Moffat;
' • - 121 Liberty; n street,'New York. '
Maich 2, , C 4 . • - • • 94reow
Itch Itch Scratch no More
SWAYNEI3 OINTMENT
Curesi the most obst Mato cases of Tetter,. Salt Rheum, -
- : • . Scald Read, all Eruptions.
.
• Warranted a prick and sore cure : • It enact all itch
ing at once r le purely vegetable :'can -, be need on the.
twist tender infant... --.- '. -.,
. . ..'Cares Itch in from PI t0. , t8 bottom'
-.'SWATNE'S OINTMENT. 1 ..,,.,-Lres, heir ! - i . r .„,. rp n i n ., i '
. SWAYNE'S OINTMENT' -
..SWAYNE'S OINTMENT”I. Cares Tr i. rca I
"SWAYNE'S OINTMENT' , f
..SWAYNE.S . OINTMENV't r , '
NALreqALT
SALT RIDL '
II
! . •
"SWAYNE'S OINTMENT.'f .----: -- .
..SWAYNE'S OTNTMEIIP.t Caree iromm . Priis l'
"SWATNE'S OINTMENT"! ,- . . , . -. .. • •
SWAYNE'S OINTMENT,' Cares r . , ,-,
-OALo ult All .:
•
'....4WALYNE , S OINTMENT' ',.
.SW4bTNE'ROINTMENT, t
,"."' " A".,•',_°, boat"SWATNE'S OINTMENT
_.
"SWAYN " .°INT/1 " T "} Cures Miro Worms!
..SWAYNE'S OINTMENT.. ... . -
..RWAY NE"S OINTMENT.I ~ • • ~,___,-,,,,....
uSWATNE'S OINTMENT . ..I '"rea ALL o''ci '''''''': ''.
- Price fin cents.' By trending c 0 cents to Dr. Swayne&
Son,- 330 North Sixth Street. Philadelphia, a 'box will
,
be-sent free of hoar-age. to any address.. ' • ' . .
Sold by HENRY SAVIOR,' Druggist - , 'Pottsville, -and
.a.l best-Dm :gists, everywhere. • . . (April 20. 'l3 - I ~•11-
DIL,SCHNOTE'S X_ASTD73O«cr PILLS
• A Substitute for Calomel. -
. .
. . .
. These Pill are cOniposed of. various roots, having
the 'pewer r to relax' the . Secretions of the liver as
.promptly and effectual ei bine' pill or: mercury, and
witliOnt producing any of those - diSagreesblc or clang- .
ennui effects whicli often follow .the use of the latter.
In-all billions disoiders these Pills may be used with
chifidence, ee they prEdmote the discharge of vitiated
•bile,.and remoie - those , obstructions from the liver and
battery ducts, which is the cause of billiotut affections
in general. . . • • ' • •
SCIIENCO.MANDRAKE PILLS cure Sick Dead=
ache, en d.all . dliordera of the Liver.. indicated by sal
low skin, coated tongue, costiveness, drowsiness, and
a enetitl, feeling of 'Weitrinesi and lassitude; showing
that the llier is in a torpid or obstruetedeondition.•.
'ln short, these Pills may be used with .advantage in
all eases when a piirghtive or alterativeMedielne is re
. .
..Please ask for Dr. Schenak's Manibake and-
Obsetire tat the two likenesses of the Doctor, are on
..theDoverrunent stamp-ono when in - the the last stage of
Consumption; and the other in'his present health.
Sold by all-prukgists and dealers. Price 25 . tents
per.box.. Principal °dice, No. la North Lila Street,
- . .
Pbiladelphie;.Pa..
General Wholesale. Agents: Demas Darnee & Co.,
21 Paris RoW,-New.Vork ; S. S. Hance, - 105 Baltlincire
St.; Ballitruire, Md.; 'John D, Park. N.B. con: of Fourth
and Withint Cinettinati, Ohio: Walker & Taylor,
134 and 186 ,:Wabash Avenue, Chicago,
.1114 Collins
Brotners, southwest corner-.of Second - and Vine Ste.,
St. Donis, Mn. ev4w.
Wonderful but True,
; MADAME -BITMINGTON. the world-renowned
As
trologist. and Soriananabnlistic..Clalrvoyent, while. in a
clairvoyant • state,: delineates the vii•ifenturee of the
pereon you are to marry. and by the aid pt an :Melva,
mint of intense pOwer, known as the P.eyclioniotrope,
guarantees to produce a perfect arid.lifp-litte picture of
the future, hashand or wife of the applicant; with date
of marriage, occripation,leeding,i Wolfe of character;
This is no imposition, as testimonials Without ntiniber
can assert. -.By stating place of birth; age, disposition,
•
color of eyee -and hair, and enclosing fifty Cents;:and
sta.mped envelope addressed to yourself, you, will
ceive the'pletnre by return mall, together with desired
• la — Address in confidence, 'MADAME, GERTRITOB
RB,3I . INOTON, P. O. Box 297, West Troy, N.Y.
Feb 9, 91
. . .
ITCH ITCH I ran( t • •
_
SCRATCH! SCRATCH SCRATCH 2
MEEATON'S OINTMENT - •
-iCinre 'the Itch 4S . liereale.
'Also cures SALT RHEUM. ULCERS, CHILBLAINS,
and all ERUPTIONS OF THE SKIN. Price. 60 cents.
For sale by all:dm - o[gs. By sending 60 cents to
WEEKS POTTER, Sole 'Agents, 170 Washington
street, Boston,. it will be 'forwarded by maimail;tive o!
postage, to any . part, of the United States. • •
Perry 11'710 Pwin . Killer
Travellers are always liable to sudden attach of
'dysentery and cholera morbas, and .these °centric&
when event fTran home are very' unpleseant... Perry.
Davis' Pain may always be relied upon' in Such
cages.. As soon as yea feel ttie iymnrams, take one
teaspoonftllin a gill of new milk andmobasses, and a
gill of kot water. Stir, well together and drink hot.—;;
Benefit the dose every hour nal' relieved. If :the pains
be severe, bathe the bowels and back with the medi
cine,
,
-- "Fisbertrien, so often expoied to hurtebY basing their
skin - pierced with honks and Boa of OA • can be much
relieved by battilng with a little Pain Killer as !loon as
he accident . occurs; In this way ' , the anguish is soon'
abated bathe as often as-onee.in:ilva wiinntes,:say
three •or tout times: and'. you will seldom liiti%e any
trouble., ' • - May 11: .. •
Free : to .Everybody.
A - large 6 pp. Circular, giving' information.of the
greatestimportanes.to the. young of both sexes: •
. It teethes how, the homely may become beautiful, the
- despised respected,-smd the forsaken loved. '' •
No younglady, or gentleman should fail to Rend their
..Address, and receive a copy, poet. paid. by rettirn ma&
Address P . O.,Drawer; 91.
Feb: 9, .67. &Cm , • Troy, T.
GREY HAIR, BALDNESS, DANDRUFF,
•
." ANY IIIIBRA.SE Or THE -.....-
1114r.:10114cOVERY oraii.VONTIPAIIN
;21 .London }tali Color Restorer:and Dressbig.. ,
"LiindofilLtir Color Restorer - and Vreesikg."`
. "London Heir Color Restorer and - Dressing.',
• (Invaluable aff . s.dresiser ithrbeittitter:) - • -
"London"- : - : - Color Restorer."
'4l.ondon". Our Best . "flair COlOr Restorer...
"London". .
sr 1 Color-Restorer."
"Ixfondon . .:-P hysiein sir • Color-Restorer: o
"-'London" • • : . . "Half Color Restorer...
"London" • • use • and Color Restorer."
"London" _
"Loudon" 'Recommend - " Hair Color Reikto.re.r..
"L an d o w. • 'Heir , Color liteetorer."
"London",
`•London^
Thu, toietkei'vtith_thitimprttval: of altwIlOtWO:•..! -
. • •••,Lofidon Bair Cokir Restorer and Dressing,. • • •
plane* It far beyond "conparisian:Witli any ether .11air
•Ra..torerever introduCed to the' American , eople. It
never fails thinipart life,•growth and'vtgor to the
weakest hair, testate anOstorstilte falling, and la sure . "
to produce a new growth of halt, causing'it to grow
thick and strong: 4tiswarranted totmetain nothing.
, Doest.NotDre.jthe Flair, -
it et - actsas a stimulant and tonic to the , .organs; lad
dile"them • vrith:new-life and- coloring matter. Dry,-
harsh, dead, or - discolored" apPestanoa'of the hair. is
'changed to Instions;thi•and'beantifal locks: The
scalp is kept clean, cool shdllsoalthy, and dandruff et
Only 75 cents a tattle: laottles, $4:.- '..kcldreas -or
ders to DR. SWAYI:IR di 50N',.p .. 0 North Sixth street,
, :.13abiby_ILEMRY IMILOR, - Druggist. PottsvOU, and
by best Druggists and Variety Stores. •
TO. CONllll,l74loTiVitill:
- • •
The'advatiter. •Im . ativenored to 'Mehl; in a
liivi - wieke a refyetWinle.:lnitiedyra. dter having suf
fered for several years with , a eetverequagaltectioni and
Abet, dread dleearm Comemmtion:.-4sinairms midre
lamism - to fello w4ofteters the mearierel , :eurM
-To all who desire it, hewirl send aftpy of the Me:
apiption need. (free . Of dame), With Vie - ffireetbans few
greparhwanduehm . :theWunei which they will find a
arse man' for .Carnitoderrom.lorrams.'Beracurrm,•
Couens... ; Coma,. and alllmmrand rigroittAftections.
MtYly ohjeet of theaderliiesindhtg :'-this Pre
n ie to benefit tile afflicted. and:spread E. team.'
• 15.0 n with% be eimeeirinlo dnabley and hOhopea
eery enterer , witttry hibrernedy;'ailt.will cow - them'
nothing, „and may, prove, a blaming. -PArtlea'wtshing
thepreettil ips„'biletern , miti;
tame •.- wasoN;7
' • •••.-70xspampnglice, Few Yow>L
.. • ;
. . . .
ipli*tgiai_ Worms Mediae,.
100 :Yekialuire:Va*MlC" - :: -- -:
92 , WoFait!Lcfrit nzidisiWO,
. 1 1iRrOnliettAtgadONSttlbuted
Addifidteff in,destriyipeiviiial do ibtiimliod
eatran•u , vrbismanaifi s
S.1 0 44:0401".1f0 16 ; 4 4, TuNd gyres u*
and keznatir be eafe salmi braidiciitidg *math eo
I. cildiermr,erpair-Woriall linabitillaelt*
l'ittifif6i;
,# , AW.tiiald,bittintroati pio.
- ;:AmpTryTrii*_ttiviftaii4_,,iii*
„....„„,....-- =,
•cimanibikw.tddecura.--ateatt AA
MtiumilWl , AlmOdiablastion,Og,
1
l . m iblia,llig . ,
aa4ldl tir " .
1 ::
. siEtrre.dgiibmtdvl
'• • J Am
' ' . 1" ' .* A--
• ' 0 it0.41 4 144:4
. . .
J- -. . ~'::: : i'. . _ ...7,: - . 3.p..• -, -:....--:...
JUNE; -,1:,0r-,-&.:A.u..qp.§T
L.Y. WHITNEY, BANKER,
cssnue snuprr, P97 S SILIA
gdeth 0..6T isMY
L. WHITNEY
- -
BANICRIti
CENTRE S TREET,- POTTIWILLE,
• . Dealer : in
A/EI2JOAN Ate FOREIGN
GOLD , AND SILVER,
Foreign Exchange,
United States Bonds,
Quartermaster's Vouchers
• And .111ucuirent ffioney:
MONEY' RECEIVED . ON DEPOSIT.-
INTEREST allciwed ea per special agreement.
STOCKS and BONDS bought and sold at
the New York. and Phlladelplda Jtoarda of
- Broken! at the 0011111thad.031. '
14" 24. X 66- 47-6 el
.
S~axos in tho English Baptist Church., of idi
neraviLle; June 2d; by the Pastor, on "The relation
of- the-Honor 'dealer to • his victims' and the corn
rouniti.". Text—"Thon Shalt not Kill."—Ex.,
ter liras Presbyterian Church, corner ida
bantongo and Third Streets. Rev: /15.1110 Rrrxr, Pas
tor. Services. Sunday 10X A: At. and TX - P. . Leo.
tare, Thrinulay evening at TX?. M. Prayer Meeting.
9.45'A. M. • Sunday' School, S.P. - , •
PrEinumel ic aj Church, • Callowhill street.—
Rev. S. S. Coyne, Pastor, will preach German ev
ery Sunday morning at 10 o'clock, askiltnglich in the
Evening at TX o'clock. ,• Residence Market street
' 1110 - 11ethitdiat R. Church. Second St., above
Market. Rev FRANKLIN. Mans. D. D.. Pastor. Ser
vices • Sabbath, at 10? A. 'arid`TX, P. M.
~ Prayer
Meetbk.'lscieslay evening, at-T# o'clock.
Or signal& Evan. :Lutheran Church,.
Market Square,' -Rev. 11. Guavas; Pastor. Services
Sabbath morning at 10 o'clock: Evening; 7X.- Week.
ly Lecture . and - Prayer Meeting, Thursday evenings,
TX.o.clock. • • .
•.131 - Milos PriTei.:Mieetin, every Sunday
Morning; from SM to 0% o'clock, in t he frame Church .
on Second Street, between Market and 'Norwegian Ste.
Ali are invited. ' . • .
tE" German Reformed
Rev J. C. Roams. Pastor. -Regular morning services,
alternately, in the. German and English languages, at
- The German serricert occnr at 10, A. on the 2lat
of !April the tith. and Gth of.
.dlay,, and VI. IGth and
30th of :lime. • AU other Et ervicesincliading each Salt•
bath evening, at T 3 o'clock; are held in the . Englieh
lanenage. • . • •
Prayer Meeting and Lecture, . each Thuteday. even
ing at TX • reclock. • .• . . .
•
AU Marriage Notices must be accompanied- smith ,26
tents to appear in the JOURNAL; " . •" '
ITAMMERLICHTENTHALIOn - 'Thursday.
May • Ml: at .oincinuati, at the residence of the
bride's untie, S: H. Witmer. q:, by the . Rev. W. X.
Ninde. ALBERT 0. Haxman of Orwtgehnrg. Pa., to Ao
'6/R.. datighter'of the Rev. Abm. Lichtenthalea, of Ja
maica; -No Cards. - - . •
iItiRRINGTON-41OftG4N—.0n the -2Sth of May,
MihatioY City. Pa...by the Rev. S. - El. Reisner. Mr.
Ramtmaroa of Shenandoah, Pa., to Mrs..
Econ . . Moieatc, of -New Philadelphia, Pa.. • •.. •
RIPP—DILLMAN—May 25th by RM.'. 'Frederick '
Krecker, Mr. Raamme KIPP. of Smithville,
County; to Mill Mama. of Cressona, Schuyi
kt4 Co., Pa. , .
SSALE . t—BROWN—Oe the ?sth nit, at the M .E.
Paftntaie, in S. Clair; by the. Rev, S. (.1. mare, Mr.
Wna,te.n SE LEY to Itre. - .A.Nx Bnown. all of St. Clair.
Simple. announeemenza' deathe, These' at ,
ewmPaniid with =Wee, ec., mud tie paid for at the
fate olio cents per tine. ••• - -
• BLAND—On the 26th of May. in Pottsville, EDWARD
E. "BLAND, Req., aged 65 year,.. • - ••• .
. .
MIDE—May 44th. in Manhelm ToweslhiP; Schuylkill.
County, Pa.. JOBIAII FUSFILDA-N, Ben of flieerge and Sa
rah Hide. aged 10 months and 4 days. .
'- - UARMRN—On the litth bee, at his residence in
Mahanoy Plane, !Schuylkill County, - Groans F. HAN.
MEN. a soldier of the War for the Union, eth Regiment
Pennsylvania Cavalry. Company C. - in the nth year of
his age. • Mis remains were inevred at the Methodist
Cemetery, Phoenixville, Chester Cotutty, Pa:, on the
.. . ,
• the family and friendly with heartfelt gratitude tender
their ttutnlcs to the gebtlemen °Mum of. the It. 'R. R.'
Co. at the Plane. for their sympathy and nenerwity,
and the accommodations afforded on that occasion..
7tfoColloColl-on. Sunday, T May 1.90, 166 T, in
fihipipensburg, J. WILSON IfeCotiou on, eon of Capt.
H. MoCeda.Onan of 9th Penna.' Cavalry, . aged 20 yearn.
MILL—Mak -15th, in East: Brunswick, M 63., Basan
Bret, aged 66 years; 3 months and 16 days.',
L 4
._ .
OCHSENFEL--May, 2004, in- Pottsville, Mims.
Tnitaassa Ociisiarai-D, aged ,14-years; 9 months' and
• THATDDZII—At Decatur; Illinois.' an Saturday.
May 25cp, Isea;•Wx. P. TIIiTCIIIIF, In the 49th year of
hie age.
YOUNGMAN-7m this Borciugh on . Wednesday ;
night, May 29th, 126 T, at the residence of her sop-in •
law, 'l'. A. 'Godfrey, Mrs. BARIIAIiet ;You:valuer,' in the
86th 'year of her age. . ' •
ca 3. 0
Da E
F„
ce
a 4 st •
;r4
1:4
. . .
. .
' - Mennments Plain and OrnamentaL 'Bead Btonea.-
.Bueloaares, Mantles, : Bureaus, Table and Washstand
Work eini3nted in . the bolt style of att and warrant
ed.. o give satisfaction: " March 90, :OT-13-Iy..
ALEXANDER • MORRIS,
KEYSTONE MARBLE. WORKS,
CORNER SECOND ' AND LEWIS STS.,
Icanta tviraainirsYvtrAN - Li..
Tomb.i;tiei 4 - Amekcan and'lMll=.2ifarbfe from $6
and npwardq.
'uch . . ly
REES if -ftl Ann . !, 'WORKS
• • Jeausbliabed ler 1853.
.Mrs. Reeser Would respectfully announce to the pub
lic that she will :continue the Marble Works, at the old
stand, „corner Callowhill and Second
.Btreeta, Wear
Market,) •
• Constantly on band all kinds of .• .
• 111
Alio ?al, every
deseriitit..— _ Le, and
Warranted to give eatillactien. -• , ,
Plane and dotherfarninhed at the aborted notice. '
... Ang 18. , 84-71 ~, • MRS. LEWIS REESER: ,
WAN T 16114.4 man cOmpetenttoerectind work
a Refinery or Ronout FID3. A ly
May SI, .07,:•22 , 3t - ....ATKINB BROS.
20 030 AGE RT 6 II..*VA NITS awn - .
ple aent - free.
&Islam entivdi new
and no Innlebtz. Address W . H. 266
Broadway' New - Jona • .
-
WANTED. ..A eltaritinii SP • 4saistant Supirin
‘ I tendent of a Blast name; bye young'man bat
ing:twit:l.l4Al knowledge- of the business. and .of. the
chemical analysis of ores, env and other materials - and
products of.the furnace. Address Box 4116,
Schenectady, N: Y. • June 1.1.5 t -29-ot•-
WARITED...-By the Setaiol Board of Port Car=
NM, 3 Mitle and 4 PenudelreaChera."2 One of;
?dale Teachers to becr.Princicol .of the High Bchooli.,-.
Examinatlon will be held In the High "School, on June
18th; at 9 o'clock, M... Term Bor 9 month& "Schools
to'open Saptember.tat. 1861. Salaries ltber.J . . '
**": • • ' CH.4I/M8E74... N,'Secretarg.-,
"hair Colprllestarer).
o . O!Oi
..Hair Color Restorer:"
*VANTED. 4 -BY etithority of an
%P . A. act' pawed. by' 'Atte Legislature of
Pennsylvania,' thaßchool Board of' Ashland is anther. ,
11.-^d to negotiate a loan of. 'Fifteen „ Thousand' Dollars.
The floard hs degrees orobtairtlag , baid antoent and
will . retelve tonna- of Illfty - Dollars end' upward, eat&
loses wheat , eight per cent:: intereet, and to be paid
$ slated perinda, ranging fr..m collo len num.; By
Order of the Beard - - J . ABBY3•I:_ LAKE.: &ay.
'HAatdaini.Jarie , 6T : 22.0 k
-
WAIIITE.D.-41x Male and Ttniejfertfale
=2 - eras are wanted for the:Public Schooled' actinyl,.
kill Township, Schuylkill, Cpunty. An ;examination
*ll-be held by County -ftpmMtendent at the Tos
cipora Si hhol , lsoalie: ati_flaturday: the 22d - of Jtine, at
9 tavelpek,* IL -The schools. will olieti=oix,thil bit of
September, and - continuer eight inon121:: -
JOle ' • ' ,"f
WANTED- immtallately"tor aush.„,by the gate
_V V- York. and„fichnyndli 00aLCompany, a second
hand wire rope, inch 'and a quarter in diameter, and, hundred and sixtyyarda Akin) in length.' - Address
SLINKY, Woodeldn..Pa._
. . ,
WAN.TED.,,Ten. Nowhere' for Ihe...l3'orotter of •
• V .. - Srhojlkill-Haven; terizi - males, ". one -tolieten en. i
pniMendent.: end leacher.'..of ,No. 1 school one 45 al
Anneher.of,E4prink..eardea 'school. and. Melt remain:.
teacherp for,ichoola Noe. 2.8, 4. 6,6, 7 aod-11.:1-
inadan,to take plate Todeday, Jo:m . lllE4 . st 8,30.11'2d
tellool room No. 'L* 13c:bads:to Anstmence it,!W
-Umber. :Mika= tenni;9lllo .1412.17.11!&1171P...)1DI
rAleiol, Janitors fur one - '•!
ofder of the • ".
„;•ai . , F:• . MOODY; Beeretni.
- Aftllin d flnilrenZNeY-,22; dr ,•,-
. .
. _ .
11111111PITE114—Ageots 4 . 111.1150• par =oath . to
AY: TA* Iltfijamii2 and istber;ZThi•lllseek , i ,
Intaingett Amite wanted fa every. fgaftyo,:. For
BA.Majlankifpl).. 6 111:21attnit Ett.wniklida.: •
"-mitre, *sr - . 144"ar
•
„, :;4 4- 4 1 BMIANTED:- - !”-
4206, -16 71 44 ; ( c" *Val ' 141 . - 1 613 tgyv,
rk.loogrix ' 1 , _ oepaums . luika::
. •
t a u . „ ammo, •••' - ' 4 •
•
%ink . IB4OI
i•
• • • "' now
D .tgaerlieripl44tAmei :4tlll-4011.*Ai
. .r!
aothslabooisistoy.APiumivmfv i
4.Poilk,Aullo.ollollllMAgio3ll,
CONVERTED .INTO
5-201.5.
ftligiouo utelligna.
NOTICES.
.MA BIER.
DIED.
WANTED.
523,000,000.
TEE NEW SIX: PER CENT,
PENNSYLVANIA
STATE LOAN
Free from all . Slate, County and
Illunicipal Taxation.
. .
..
Will bi furnished in ittme to snit, On apok,il r , r , „
.the nearest Bankor Banker; also, by either of the ez,.
deriigned..
• SAY COOKE & 00,
DREXEL•& Co.,
E. W. CLARKE C 0&..,
_ Banker, Philndn i
April °T, 'OT . 17. Gt.
GOVERNMENT
NATIO"NAL.' BANK,
Offers for sale , at lowest.market rate
- GOVERNMENT SECURITIES,
AA FOLLOWS
IL S. 7-30 - Treas. Notes date of Aug. 15, '6t
So it fifi J une 15, -, 6 ,
u. if 16 4 ' Ady 15,
, 6s
5-10 Loin of 11862.
5-20 Loan of 186-1.
5-20 Loan of 1865.
10-40 Loan of 1864.
GOLD, STOOLS AND 'BONDS
GONIERindrafT SEMIRITIES BOUGHT
AND SOLD.
- -
DRAFTS
On England, Ireland, France and Germauy, f(q
gams to suit pnrchafera.
H. H. lIHNTZT.NGER.
Pottsville, January a. ,G 6
GENERAL . N 011 CE s
NOT ICE.-Notice is berely
kyd we-have parehiseil of. Henry
burners andlxitt ritWrig..and haye loaned pe•
Daatel SchmerJc fols use daring oor plea•er
C. A E,
Retnylkill leaven, May 25. IAII7.
NOT.. elli.—The 'first asst.:ismer)!
Dollars on each share of the cat.idid
therSchnylkill County Turnpikeßoad Crania: y )..
due and payable at the office of the Trelfinri r
:rifle, on or before the first day of July, 1 , 17,
day a meeting of the stockholders will bi. t id, hl itl
mclork, A. WC, at "Pennsylvania Hall, to ;
report and surveys of the engineer, and _in
rout's of the proposed main roads trio "i to.
St. Clair, .litlahanoy, City, .Ashland. Shenalidi is t,
Ringtown. . - B, T. TAT! r it,
May 25, .67—.21.43t Secretary and Ti, 31,,
~y i /, • . NOTICE.—The andminned; guliar, ,
boa• Beery. son of the late Henry ZoiVw: ',
Swatara. Reilly Towiashin, hereby cacti ,c• 1.l,•• 1 c. , 1.
not to trust him, as I will pay no debt• of li-h r.,1•:, •
ing. . " I will give notice when this Testr!et 0, e Iv
.moved. . - - Jtlll:4.ZEltitE.
Gimrdville, Schuylkill Co., May 25, !GI . . . ••_
TO .TIIECITIZENS of Scho)t.
kill Countj.-'rhe. laws of your j'oto. , ,
prohibit tobacco and clear dealers in other part,
State from selling to dealers, and others rt,":l , t
your Countj, unless a license Is taken oat c0ctinv . ....,..
.We wiII cell to citizens miners and. dealers. tote;&.,
segara and pipes (cent by express) at from :s to io ,
cent. less than you can bay of your"merepsnt...
have bad this law passed for their own benefit, co 11.41
they may rule the prices: . .
Make up clubs and remit us $lO or'npwardS,
det from us. and you can save nearly one-half
money, and get .better articles of tobacco and r ::Fa
than you can buy In your County. We guarantee
isfachon. 'Send for our price 114, so that you may
our prices , and order by clubs. We • will send
'goods by express. Addrsre all orders to
AL B. DEAN, No. 413 Chestnut street, '
May 11, 'CT 19-um
A lr o DlisilatO IL'T lON OF CO-PA It •1:. -
PI IC u nde rat irn
give notice that the partnership heretofore A 4
between them In the Ice bnsineas, tinder the firm
of BOWEN' bCO.. , is this day Masolved 4
consent- , The acConnts of the - lite firm u i 3 11"-
by either of the mideraigned •'
. . _
CO-PARTNERSIIIP.—:-:The
have this day formed a Co-partnershio in tni• 1,
ness, under the Ihm name of BOWEN S:
CHARLEs T. 14i1V1::\
WILLIAM J. f111::c
17 Ct
Fottirl)le, April 1, ISGT
THE NEW YORK .
KILL- COAL CO., have Ile Afils., two or
three Carriages, (one a two-horse Carriage), t 2 11.):..4
and 20 mules. • •. -
Ur Fur further partterdars, apply to the - nfri,. the
Com_pany, at -
• . WooD:41)F,
Feb 2, •01-5- • Schuylkill" Coutif.
PATENT 131PUOVEYIENT or
PITEA - 31. Uta E.--To nil -1$ bomAt
mar Concern s—For at.d in consideration of
in band, paid by. - JAMES WREN of the lior..ncs,
Pottsville, County of Schuylkill. to Lewis
of Philadelphia; the receipt whereof hasheen .asknooi.
the said Eikenberry has sold to 'aid JAMES
WREN the to aiiply it in the Cotinty of
kill, State of Pennsylvania. on Steam Engine. •14
111 - DSO or that may hereafter be used. Lewis
ma Improved' Cut-alt for Econoiniring
Steam by Expansion-( for
.which ' letien4 pre
ant, dated November 19, 1561, have been grunid
the said Lewis Eikenberry by the totted State.., Aii
persons desirous! of information regarding the hen,f.T
of thisYalve can receive the same at my office
street, •The benefit of this - Valve to all perm:- ii4ing
Steam Engines is from 20 to 40 per cent. on the hes:
engine built.' It can be applied to all old engines,
!nista are requested to take part in this import
ant improvement , • They can secure from me the fr,a
for building new engines and also for putting the-IW.
provement on old engines. •• They can see the motion
at my works in Coal street. where I have it on my en
gine working to the savings herein stated. It also ran
be seen at - Finch &-Evansvalklill, at' Atkins & Broa.v
and Palo Alto Rolling Mill. JAMES WREN,
Washington Iron Works.
2-tf
x x
2 E .
!
Ei
FotUnfflle, Feb. 27.'88
TUE PNEI7.7I:ITIC Ott KCn
"Ewan *movie/00.
TO MANUFACTURERS OF IRON AND ST EFL
The Proprietors and Assignees of the seVeral I erten,
Patent granted by the United States to Henry -
,merand Robert hinehet of England, and to Will I=
. Kelly of this country, for certain Improvemews In the
Manufacture of Iron and Steel, having, fur the purp
ose of avoiding all andlict of claims thereunder. o.n
rolidated their interests in said patents under s Pm!
. teeship, • styled .“The -Trustees of the PurShuaucer
BeaSemer Proems of making Iron'and Steel.' the un
dersigned, the Trustees aforesaid, invite atternon w
the advantages of the above'proses, • rohich oth h.,
rally and ,- freely, examined,at the works of ale-,+
Winslow& Grlswold, - at Trry. N. Y.
•.
The great :STRENGTH,. TOUGHNFS4, r 5,1
ITOMOGENEITY and.comparative .CHEAPNE; , S uF
PRODIRITIO.N, of the Pneumatic or BeaKtnat
Cast Steel, as. well as the enormous, exv.rnf ,e
Manufacture and nee abroad, .are- too well ku.,wn
tegttire comment ; , and the undersigned are.plea;ed to
state that Works haveheen, and others are now !nine
erected in'diferentsections of the country, to
-in part, the 'demand .so rapidly inrreasing here ca
STEEL BALLS, - AXLES,TIRES • BOILER PLATES,
FORGINGS, &c.. &c., made by their process.
Licences will now be issued on reasonable - term , to
all who desire to engage in the new. inarrufactu,,.. and
the undersigned hereby give notice that they has e sp
111 r. Z. 8. DIYRFME, of 418 Will u t
: • Philadelphia, their' Geeinersil Agen t,
for the management of thfs departthent of their ttn4-
nese, and,, that all comnionleittions reepeetlniLleett-es,
and hiquirles eoncerntog the. PrOaess, and .4:0,4 of the
apparatus therefor, Re., 1r.;.„ ehonld, be addrmised 1.)
him.tus above.
__
I
JOHN P. WNSLOW_ , Troy, N. Y. •
. JOHN A. ORD3WOLD, Trasteis.
DANL. J MORRELL, Johnstown, Pa.
- January 106 T '- 1-Gm
LEGAL _NOTICES
E ST.ATIL.:OI? JOHN HINHICII.- n!:'
cestsed...Whereas or A dmlntatratiou
the estate of John Emrich.' late of North Ibtah , .!m -
Town.hip; is the County of Schuylkill, deceased. I,,ve
been granted to the attmetlber,-2.11 perenns
claims against said estate are requested to
them and those indebted wield estate to mtke Imme•
'Hate pas meat to -FRANCIS SMRICg Admiwor.
• North Manbalm,.May 22 Gt.."
"lau IIiTATEt - OF *BANK POT, Dee.i. —
-11- . 4 Lenore of administration upon the Testate of Foot
.Pott, late ofthe-Borough of Pottsville, Schuylkill
deceased, hailiag been duly granted Dy thO Register for
said CountyntSchnylkill, to David P Brown. - who n.
titdeitin the Said Borough of Pottavillethose lndekei
to the said estate are requested to make payment, and
all persons having claims'or demands against the , h 'd
estate, are requested to make known the same n I
delay; to the undersigned.
DAVID P. BROW'. Adminikrator,
May 24, - 'P. Pottsville, Pa
NOTlCE...—Schuillkilli County On.. •
•
At an Orphena. Court held at Pottsville, AL,I
L Dv said tbanty, on Monday, the_l3o3 of Mt y.
- before the. Ron. Benjamin 'neither to.l
Jacob Kline; Reg ;.Atetociate Jadgee of nand Court:
In the matter of the partitionof the Real Eetna of
John Reed. late of Pottaville, deceased—
The tetnni of Inquisition being tiled In we Co" ) .
the acid Court direct the came to be confirmed
and grant a rule on all the helm and patties Ir,trrr•- n 1
to appear on. the first Monday Tune. Term ,rnext, and
accept or Tame the Meal - Beate. at the valfu n iiM,
thOw cause why the eimiiihotadtintlie sold: ' •
~And the mid Omni tfiroet nonce to. be given to the
Wriot melding withlb the Ocitinte,' by appncßti:o
m ' Milers' ' , limns' of Pottsville, • en , three stir r ,,
e
sive insertion's, prior to the first Monday of Jnne next.
By the Court '-' • 'CRAB. hfol6l= Clem : .
•
May 18 'GT • 211.131
NOTlON.—Estate of Anu
ihrens,--deessed.- Notice Is-hereby. th 4;
' letters testamentary on the-estate of the a bo ve uar.3Pd
Ann EverK late: of the Borough of. Ashland, -in the
County ortichnYlkillafeeeasedi: Lave been granted to
William Evens, residing at Woodsid e Pester Tolvs -
ship, in :the County Of Lovett*: ; `- All persons h,v,r;
...cli.Orileaistderagaittet the estate of said
are requested to make the *same ,Anown. to ilk,
Willtanarens, or, to Sit Yocum Attorney,- at Mh
land‘iforeesitt, wlthOnt'dela . •Ellenfd) - •
EVENS, Executor.
Itar4, : ' •
DaiiNroTßATOWAffliOTteE.-Wi,r ,
'CA Ate lettere et adattnbendkm'em sbe.eatate of win.
A 21.mmrmao, late of Cressona; fiteheylkill
deieated; hate , beeegranled to the ital?ectiber,—
Jo hereby given toeThpentoteLindebtedlo said c_ au
to make tellitedleto reymeaVeod thee. having clozh
Menet the same to protremt thern.to. • •
8A111214,11. MADDlRTipaarigabp%llelrealkill Co
4017 • - • • • 16..6L!
.
L taika llit
—.lllMts: 407._ • •JK no*, pr
" "" •7 ilrOli Ltkabeer Pa
at red i t
"': of 5 feet length &111.
LlUbbli•t'APlO. - •• • tr , - ktpdfrorprop TIM."
SO ctrdelV! AA. ; . •
. . ow ..41
o IPAI •
—lovr
. . •
CHARLES T. BOWEN,
AMOS SPOIL•:. ••