J;.*,00' . ,:ir . ...100114.1 - OTTSVILLE, „ PA. (11.6T16*D6N, JULY 6, 1567. --- . 1 * • Ite just and fear not ; Let an the ends than aiinit at be . thy country's, TA, Garaasul truth's." THE NAHUFACTITHE OF OAST STEEL: Sorad years since we directed attention in an article-Ali which wagave the process of manufacturing cast steel by the Bessemer pro cess, and instances of the great durability of rails made from this; steel,—to the rapidly growing importance of this branch of manu facture, and urged its introduction into this Re gion. We are , happy to state that the project of establishing extensive steel works in this. County, is now under fall headway, with every prospect that the undertaking will be successful. We are informed that one hun dred and (fifty thousand dollars have been subscribed to the stock of the proposed works, and that this amount will be largely increased; • As no reasonable person will question the importance to the material prosperity of this Region of the establishment of steel works, we need not dwell on that point. We pro- pose merely in this article, to again' show what the Bessemer process is, and to give an instance or two of the extraordinary enduring qualities of the Bessemer steel rails.- These facts must convince all that the steel will in a comparatively short period of time, supplant the iron rail' on all of . our important lines of railway, and that . if not Manufactured here as it should, will be imported from Europe to our loss and disgrace as a manufactaring peo ple. We therefore, believe firmly that the investments made earliest in these works in this country, will yield to the parties invest- log the largest-returns - • - A - concise and dear statement of the Besse mer process is contained in a:pamphlet by Henry Bessemer, entitled, "Oa the Mantific tore of Malleable Cast Steel," &c., published at - this office in 1865. It is as follows : • The Bessemer process is exceedingly simple: The ashole process rests upon the:action which a strong current of airexerts rpm the elements with which it . meetiewhen forced through a mass of melted pig iron. The stirring and combustion which it ptoducee, trans forms certain qualities of cast iron into a malleable metal that may be Avronghtlike cast steel. The Ileese. iner process is, therefore, a method of • refining. ' The operation is performed in large, egg-shaped vessel ; the cast iron is poured in in a liquid condition, and. then the Birds forced beneath it at a high pres.dre.— The metallic maze remains fluid while the air acts norm It. The resulting malleable product is obtained In wt.-, tabs cases by stopping the air while the process is yet Incomplete, or, more generally, by prolooging its ac tion until the iron is converted into a sort of burned or over-refined mass; and. then' transforming this. pro duct immediately into a malleable metal. by means, of the simple addition of . a cryaotlline and eteely iron ThOTTOCeRS was at first carried on in a sort of fix • a. ,pola I ornace, into which airIVIIP driven by nve ys ram:- • slag through the bottom ; hut on account of the outde caused by the triveres.clogging. another .arresegement was eabstituted. where the vessel-in whieta. the process ' 1. execnted IC called the CoavyllTTll, A TA — to a moveable egg-shaped pot. with a short neck. titlemadeofpiates of iron rived together, and gefitected inside with a ebectieg'of refractory ei11y...9&f0 CO c. lu thickness: At about the helghrof its ',entre of gin ity. thin vessel le suspended upon teen trunnion!, to which are geared . wheels that eiittbie the apparatus to be turned by hand or by niactikeiry on a 'horizontal axis. An air-box, whicbienlfutdee the lower part of this converter. coin - tnnatcates with the interior by means of a .nnmber of small holes passing through the fire-brick bottom.— The air pastes from the blowing engines throneh a hollow trunnion. thence into the bottom of the convert er, and may be thrown In small jets . Into its interior; no matter in what petition the he tnreed.- - Tee capacity of the converter 1. usually frdm five to six times the amount of the castiron to be treated.— The throat should belarge enough to let out the gases when the prom's la in operation. mid to enable the fluid metal to be poured in andeat without danger of obstruction. During the operation' of converting, the month of the converter passes under a hood of sheet iron.' which carries the fames to a chimney. When the Operation in terminated. the converter is turned over, and all the metal it contains Is:poured into a la dle, at the bintom of which Is a hule,-ont of which the fluid maYs can be tapped. The metal has a 'tendency to cool rapidly, and most be poured tan the. moulds soon, and with carethat it shall not touch the walls of the mould. • In order to accomplish this. an hydraulic crane Is peed, of which the pivot is a piston playing In a cylinder, and at the end of a horizontal arm extend ing from this pivot is fixed, the ladle; the moulds are • placed in a circle .aroutid the pivot at smell distance, that a hole in the bottom of the ladle can be brought directly over the centre of each of theirs hysevolving . - the crane, while the height of the ladle above - the mould may he fixed by nailing or lowering Ste piston pivot by hydraulic power. The blowing ergines are of various patterns. They should furnish alairs/ 25 cubic metres of 81r (reckoned at thelension of the atmosphere) per minute and per ton of pig won need. The average pressure of this air should be 7e , c. mercury, and it should be thrown into ' the converter through thirty-five' tnyeres. each, Ic. in diameter. - • It is, however, always beet to have a conelderable surplus of power in the blowing apparatus. When the cast iron is not taken directly from the blast furnace • in a liquid state, it is necessary to have a reverberatory tarnace for remelting; this should be piric.al at each a. height above, the level of the converter, that the liquid iron will flow readily from the former into the latter The 'toe Should be introduced into the converter as hot and fluid as possible. In regard to the tenacity. of this metal we might state that its power to resist wear and • abrasion, has been tested •on a large bcale in England by the London and North-Western Itailway. Fsirbairn 'states that in 1861, five' hundred tons of steel blooms, -manufactured' by Bessemer and Company, were rolled into • rails, at the Company's works at Crewe ; the object being to subject them to the severest teat • by putting portions. of- them down on such: puts of the 'line as, were subject to the most rapid destruction, not only by the paisage of the regular traffic, but where the' stopping, and starting and the Making up of trains 'was constantly going "on. The Crewe, station-it. . seems, offered the best opportunity. for . this . test, since the wear of rails on the two through lines' at the station was so great, tha t good. iron rails. at this Part - of the line were worn on both sides, and removed on an aver age three times in . a year. On -November 10th, 1861, the -double line of rails on each side of the Crewe station were laid in Besse peer. steel, and in NoVember, 1864, not one of these had been turned or required turning. - It - is stated that there are even,now no signs, • • of wearing out. They are less round than they were on the top - surface. Part of the metal has been lost by abrasion; but it is pos • itively asserted, on examination, that not a. crack or split is to be seen in any one ofthem, and that it Is difficult to estimate bow many more years this first side Of the rail will last. Another mode of testing was adopted at '..Camden station.' At a part subjected to ex eessive wear there, a steel rail was placed op polite to an iron one, so that every train that passed subjected, the iron:rail and the steel rail to precisely the same amount' of weir. These rails were inspected froni time • . to time, and the results kept in a book of re ference by an officer. of the Company, from Which the following facts were obtained: • , Steel rail laid down on the goods line lathe Camden station. on May 9th, 19 1 2.—0 n exam:eat ion of this rail at the end of September 1%4. it exhibited but little sign• of wear. It. had not yet been turned over. the first fare being still nopertneat sue in rerfect working .conditlon. On au average. Siaiegoode.trntka have para. rd over It every ti 4 hours., at d e-itirasted that since St was trot laid down.-not ief.thsn 7,ryto.Goo t rac k s h ave , paused over It.- The iron hill ,placed opposite to tide steel one, in May ieee. was turned over in July, ard. • worn ant and n.plact , dby a new rail on Septs miser 9th ; . -this was turned over - MCA , Wier eth.- and were out, and.replaced on January ett. 1663 ; We one way turn ed over on March le!, and warn nut and replaced on •April 'Alth : it was timpal on July Sd, and worn out and replaced. September ?9th; this in like. manner, was turned on box mber itith, and worn out and replaced Perinaryl6lll, 18610111 s roil was turned on April 16th. and worn' out and - replaced on August Gih ; this last rail was .M.nse at the time when the steel rail wasnx *mined at the latter end of September ISG4; white the • steel one, placed opposite and subjected to such extra . ordinary.emount of intik- was still free from any erark or signs of, destructive wear, other than a small and gradual redaction of the weight of metal of which It wan composed. . Results so important to the interests of the Company. says Fairbairn, were not likely to be lost sight of. While these experimental trials with rails were going on. the employ ent of steel for plain and cranked a4es, and wheel-tires, and other parts of the locomo tive engines, were made,- and with results so satisfactory that the Company resolved on erecting extensive Bessemer steel ivorkit , at Crewe, which are now capable ofturning out four hundred tons of steal per week, and fox nistthig all the metal required by the Compa ny in rte tall, inill,r:and engine-making es tablishment. ' In substituting steel kit iron rails, a ques tion of. very 'grave importance arose, as to whit was to be done with the old wornout rails, which It is proposed to replace. Under • ,the old system of rail making, •they were of considerable value, because they could be cat into abort lengths, piled and again rolled into railway bars. This question has how ever, been , satisfactorily solved, for Mr: Bes semer, who, in a recent patent has shown bow, by cutting up the old wronght-iron slab, and heating them with waste heat of the meltiqg furnace, or by putting them it mice Intc:ahe Converting vessel upon the fuel used to beat the vessel, after some ten minutes blOwing, and when the' rails are highly heat • ed, the Said pig iron-is run in among them. The enormous amount of surplus heat that . - may be generated, by increasing the volume of the.blast, will, in ten or fifteen minutes, melt down all - the pieces' of wrought iron rails, which will form part of the charge 'of steel, without involving any extra cost in the process. . In view of the probable erection of works here to vianufacture steel by the Bessemer process, these facts are extremely important' and iiteresthig, and should act is ad Incen tive to the speedy placing of the wile pro. Joel on a flrin'fonnantlon. " -` • EDITOUS , TABLE; • "Tor , Prucrieor. VAlonta." published by Pas chall Morrie, 1120 Mahal street, 'Philadelphia, htui donned a new Inapt tipe,and is otherwaya improved. Although' oung .. Farmer hag - been very aneceastal, and it promisee to be one of the .most useful agricultural. monthlies in the. ccmn try. We gengratnlate our contemporary upon if el neat appearance and evidently ptasperntut.condi ., • . lli.uctrwifititis - MACAmbif . 7nunxititiber . ; - 'republished: by the Leonard Scott Publishing • Company, 140 -Fulton street, New . York, has the' following contents : part six of Brownlows ; The .Reign. of Law ; My Hunt of the Saver For ; Was George''-TitTrit "a -Constitutional Klee.; Strikes and Trades-Unions; - Dante in English ; Terza Rime ;.• The Reform- Bill; Clause .la.: and Idr .: Lowe;' Index; *floe number of Blackrxid. - ' Enny Sivirenn Ur July 6th ghee the condo- - Isiori of Miss Thackeray's charming version of " Ideantr anithe - Beast," =Lavery - attractive ar-: tide, 'l A Charm of Birds," by Charles Kingsley. It also contains a very valuable paper on " Mira cles and Special Providences," by , Prof. Tyndall, one • of the moat eminent ementrats 'or England; : the . stun' . of," Si=ore of Silcoteg" ia continued, 'and ninnerokis - ehoit Midlefidabifi:iike tchSuf are: ._ • _ _ , , Tex Ana:or= 'MosTrirs' for July begins . the . 20th volume of that now standard migasine,. and - example to American neriodleale, It has excel-. lent papers from_Dr: Reyes, James Parton, and .Toisepti M area: Somesel&tions from Hawthorne's • English Notabookoffermild readingoompared'with the lively arid-suggestive Memoranda which pre ceded them. According to a..paragraph' in the English Notebook,, Barbara Lewthwaite; ' the heroine 'of Wordesrth's beautiful little idyl of !The Pet Lamb," died' only a few years ago, an 'elderly -woman. leaving grown-up children be hind her. Her marriage name was ' Thompson, and there was nothing; says Hawthorne, remark able in her character. Professor. Lowell, has a poem in this number of 41.0 Atlfintici. Teti good, entitled An Ember Picture.' . - • I .Tuu RWRIMEDIC ITAOARINE. FOR YOirSol PEOPLE. —The July bomber of this remarkably One niag % azine contains eighteen stories, sketches,. etc.,' =feral of them most eharminglY illustrated. The. literary matteris by 'writers of reputation, while the illustrations are by first-class lutists. There is an . interesting biography. of Saninel Adams 'with hie portrait from Copley's celebrated paint ing. and a view of Fennell Hall 'is it was a bun-. dred years ago. : The stories from Shaluipeare are .anew and commendable feature of .this publiea , tion. The Glorious Fourth, Historic Recollection at Frederick, and. other matter to =nee and in struct' the , yonthful,..render this a most capital ~tis 3 number. It ie published by Hurd and Houghton, 459 Bookime street, New York.. We commend this antifut thagazine to the - attention of parento as one which ehonld be placed in the bands of 'their children, for their instruction as wen= RUIIIBO gotal Matto. Weekly Almanac. lu zi: . I 8 " • • roars ®seen 4' •85 'T 33 I 4 1141.1 1131 4' 34'1 33 4 '31.7 • R 2.1 4 ST ,T. 32! 4 38 al - 4 :39,7 .31 9ATVEDI4,.. 7 SUSDAT...".... 8 NDuroiv..... 9 Ttizawr..... 10 WIMM4BOII. 11 TUUBSDAV:... 10 FRIDat MEETEOBOLOGIO.AL TABLE. afp,abdri JUN% ISM .4.. 66 77 • -81. 2• , „...././ Cr . 81 •82 • . , 3 .r 0 82 • 84 4 ' 60 82 ,99 . On Junelst, atT . ...-X. M., the .mercury Indicated 41 0 : On Jim . sth. ttPrp, 81., It rose to 84°.. The lowest and highest te2rla...ture for the month. . Jul yifth, th e mercury rose to 90 degfeea In thi at it Xi.. dl, so far the hottmt day of the reason I '7 Tim cherry crop is a failurti in' this vicinity I this season: . • • " , A good second hand Dian° is for, sale at. Leim mer'o -music atom, 193 Centro street, this for- Th'e elope at the - Keystone Colliery, Ashland, is on fire ' from billet. An effort is being made to drown it. The ladies of Treninut on the Fourth present a beautiful flag to Washington Camp, No.-78, P. O. of J. S. A. - To-mnrrow—Twenty-seyenth •Sund4y of the year, and third iliter length, 11 hunre'aud 57 'minutes: •, .• -• Patrick Murphy, Thomas Francis. and Jokn Caron, - miners, were. injarod by mining accidents in collieries near Mahanoy City last . week. ' . . Internrtl Rerenite Taxee.—The liet .of Inecree Taxes, Licenses, kc ,'is now in the hands of Tas. A. bows, Collector at Pottsville, where payment can be made. • . . . . . Tuesday last being the. anniversary of the Get tyhhnrg victory, flags were displayed at the Uri on Hotel, Sterner's , Hotel and at other points in tho Borough.. - - - - . . , . On the 28th ult., John .Derr, aged 40 years,' a miner at Buck Ridge Colliery, Shamokin, was killed by a fall of. coal.' Re leaves a wife and sev eral children. ' Robbery.--On Sunday night last thieves enter ed the house of Mr.• Daniel B. Seidel, : Market street, this Borough, and took a ham, several do zen eggs, a:quantity of bread, cakes, butter, etc. One of the engines constructed at the establish ment of Mr. George W. Snyder, in this Borough, _:for the new rolllni . mill of the Reading Railroad Company at Refuting, was shipped to its . destina- Bon on Sunday last. A Rioted meeting of the Pottsville School Board took plac3 on Wednesday evening last. A com mittee to rearrange the salaries of teachers, was appointed. Beyond that there was no business of any particular importance transacted. Sailed for Europe.—CoL J. J. Connor of this Borough, and Dr. McKibben of Ashland; sailed for Europe on Wednesday last, with the intention, of being absent three or four. months: They have our best wishes for a pleasant juurney.• A little sou of air.— eight years old, on Thursday list while crossing . Centre, street, fell, and nearly bit his tongue through. Yester day it is was so much swollen that the boy could not talk. A singular and painful occurrence. .2 be. Minersville Literary Association will re sume the discussion of the question "Are secret societies 'productive of good ?" on. next Monday evening, at 7A. o'clock, in the Council chamber on Railroad street. All persons are invited to be present. , • The-teachers and pupils of Paschal Institute, return their sincere thanks to Bosbyahell Bros., and Philip Brenneman & Cu. for their kindness in gratuitously assis'ing them so greatly in their late Exhibition.. Also to a generous public for their liberatpatronage. .'• John-. McDonald', employed at Foeht's near 3labanoy City, was accidentally killed on tbe 24th:ult., in coneequence of-a piece of timber fall ing upon him and breaking hia neck. McDonald was formerly a resident of Cass. Township. His remains were interred at Mineraville on Sunday. At a stated meeting of Pottsville 'Division, Sons of Temperance, the following Officers were elected and installed. for the • ensning term W. P., Wm. G. Parker; W. .A., 'Oliver Smith; R. 8., J: S. Hawley ; - A. E. S:, Joe. Protheroe; T, A. K. Zeller; F. 8., W. G. Shertel . ;•C., Wm.. Jolly; A. C„ Jos. Evans ; J. S., W. R. Bree; 8 „ John Hodgson ; Chap.,Geo. Released on Bad.—On Saturday 'last Edward Brebanny, _who was recently arrested and corn .niitted to prison charged with being implicatedin the assault on the honse.of Henry Rapp in Union 'Township and murder of Jacob Johnson, which took place in March last; was ,brought before Court on a writ of habeas corpus, and released-on giving 5,000 bail, to answer.at neat term. •: The bounty papers of George Wilson, a soldier of Compin.y . L, Third Pennsylvania'Cavalry, who was killed in theßattle of .Gettysburg, and which are now the property of his father and mother; living near New Castle, wore lost on Wednesday 'last, between -Pottsville. and New Castle.: Tlie finder will please. return them to the fatheer,• Thomas Wilson, or leave them'at this office. 'Anticipated Visit Of an Impqrtent Legislative inveztigating C,bmmtriee.—A committee appointed at the last heshion of the Legislature, to investi; gate.alleged illegal charges for transportation on the 'Reading Railroad, willarrivo hero on the 15th inht., and hold sessions durin the 16th and 17th.. A1l parties interetted would tDwell to prepare to meet the committee and furnished desired eirt deuce. - • . •Eclipse of Jupiter's Moons. —On the 21st of: A-- duet nest a celestial pbinontenon will be wit nessed which has onlytwice before been recorded in history. The planet Jupiter -will at that date be seen unaccornpaniedby her satellites kr near ly two hours. Of her fOIMIZIOOI3B three will be in; siaible on account of their passing 'simultaneous ly over Jupiter'edisc,-and the fourth will be im mersed in the shadow of the planet.. Pobce Matt crs.—D tiring June ?Samba]. Holeler'a pnlice rasa° ilf ty-eix arrest& Everything,eontin nee quiet at the mines in kill and Nor. thnowerland counties. : On Wednef,day . last the Cominiaiioners of this C Nulty pa:dthe police in full up to theist instant. The Coiwcwiteionere of Northumberland have re fused to pay the police for that County. and legal • measure IS will he taken to compel the payment, Dro7rning Case". —Joseph Sipple, aged 15 years,' son of Mr. 7ur. Sipple of tniaßorough, was drown. ed beloi Heading ontbe29tb alt „while drasiing a bucket of .water.' He was employed - as driver on a canalboat. His remains were brought .to this Borough and interred on Monday last. . We are informed that about five minutes after young Sipple was drowned; another boat-boy be longing to St. Was drowned to a similar manner, near the same place.. • •. The following income 'returns Were accidentally, omitted from the Pottsville' list published in our last :—Patterson; Burd (estate of) $4,300 ; Patter son, Joe. E. $184..D. H. Seidel's inmate return which was, published at $3,575, should have been. $35. W. A Field, Schoylla Haven, returned an income of $573, not $173 se published. , The re turn of Wm. Taylor, Jr ~ of CassTownibip, which was , published" $29, should be $ 9 J00.. The 're ton:is of G. T. Johns, ano - G.. W. Johns and W. Epting, (the two latter trustecs of Emma Epting, Caroline • Ooryell and. Clara. Wren). which were tinder the. bead, "Blythe Townehip," should have been under the Iliad of St.. Clair. A corrspondent of the Pittsburgh Gazette in a letter from Meadville, -Pa., dated Inne-917, speaks . of the commencement exerebsee of Allegheny Col lege,' and says . D. • On Xonday Itev:P.. Moore, D. D., of Pottirrille. Pa., delivered an addreve to rbelitudents. It was all that could be desired. fall of valuable thunghte, clothed in chaste and beautiful language.: - • A uorreepondenthr Ufe' - 2Mfaelfilditpmel also writing 'from the ssuMplthe, nays • OD Monday evening addreeis wasidelleteed - before the' Allegheny and Philo-Franklin -Literary , Societies, by Rev. P.lfoore, I). D o ; of Pottsville, late of Phila delphia. Por complus ,of thought„beauty -erateep. ton; andtbasteneu of diction; it livseldom equalled. Death of an Aped Ladv.—On 'Meaty last Mrs. Alice Shay, widow' of the' late Jacob ,Shelly, died • at the residenne of - het daughter, _Mrs. tinning Billyman, in tide Borough, aged =sty- - two years, eight months and nineteen dam -De-1 ceased was a native of Montgomery County; Pa., and .mmed.to this County, ith• her lindband; ithout fifty:eight years ago. ' Up to 'Within ii few :_weeks of her death, ahe oonld. without the aid of apeetaclrs, read'le nelneapeeptint. &Aire her death, Mrs. ftellywnstprobably the Wait liv ing remident of Betivikdi County: 'Pier tamed= were interred yetterthLeftentootiin limited)" el. Wish • Cemetery,- this oormalt; •athmdit4lo grave by Oarge number of binds and rebAlves. .The•eh - elvtitg to pr. Defines store ; Miasma, broke'dewn on the gschnwilvalitot a-loaa to him • Denthi if Soldiers.-`llaniel Lit Mr. who served daring the rebellion in CaWfpl4ll, Forty-eiglith Rennsylvanie Regiment, Orpt. Wm.'llinkle, died in this Borough Wednesday last, of constpp• tion,agedlit Testa:- Hewes s brave and faithful soldier,;and-•secired . the 'Fitimildence.ot ,his eat mantling Mikes & IfieilltieasWaßAllCltridedsand 'he left a wife and two children in destitute dr cdthatirteet,'±ThariiiiMina'otthis,deeessed=were interred yesterday afternoon in Mount _Laurel' Cemetery, attended.ui geitgraveky, st - nti94 l A the deceased's old:ctinimMdanitiln-aitia: -- ' The :remains of Jceppli . - T. Morgan, age d 18 . years, wlm w*selso a gallant soldier in the Won army during the Rebellion, were interred in this Borough yesterday_;: A Fine-Mimicltcvan Pipe -and Historical Belk., —Our friend,. Theodore Can Dwain, tobacco deal.; er, has now ._on exhibition at his store on Centre - street, No; 253; a meerephattm .moretban 100 'years old; which isihe most beautiful specimen • of coloring- :which eve .baraecer seen.' The pipe. originally was the property of Mamba] Rachurlei, of the imperial army, who presented Ron a ser- . tairklargkwai3l6.o474lou. Penslia; of Italy: It is now owned by a gentleman of 'this County,Wbo received it at the'NewTork Sanitary. Bazaar; wherelt ws:s- depoi.ited to be raffkd for at the value of 5250, by-!Dr. Hagen 'a: Albany.. It is said that one Dr. Wright,..received it from the Marquis renslia, for attending: him while in the hospital with email-poi, - and be presented .it to Dr. Hagen.' Thbfrare g#11:1 labould be seen by all smokers and lovers 'of _the beautiful. • • - . . Base Bail —The Expert Chili of Mineraville are requested to state. Is- preparod ,to receive challenges to play matches. Clubs desirous' of throwing down the gauntlet to the Expert; . kill address Mr. John N. :Fidler, corresponding sec retary of the Expert.. The following is the score of a match played at . . Yorktown on the 20thillihno : •. .•. . . EAGLE. SR. • -. EAGLE, JIL 0 R • . • O. R. Jag Skelton p....... 4 4 [John McHugh 4, 5 J 114 Allen c.. . ... 2 3 R Wallace 3 T Ulrich s s 4 . 2 I; Wm Welacess. .. 4 5 I Skelton Ist b - 4 3 Wm -Willis let .3 - _ 6 And Itotomum 2d b 2 2 diTohn Renner 23. b.. ,4. 5 John Gll3d b - 2 Pat CLeberry Ed b.. 6 4 J Wbitater c f 2 c 1 9 Eck , Fitch r.f. '1 8 liJanßoylB • 2 5 Wm Edwards I 4 -2 :iGeo Parover I f... 1 7 innings: 7 ld. 2d. ad. 4th. skb. 6th..7th.'803...9th.' EiMle, Sr. 9' •1 . . 6 o s o '8 .- Eagle; Jc. 2 - 1.1 0 -19 • 2 IT. 5 1 catcs.—Regle,.l3r.. l a Balk, Jr., 2. " • IJmptiC.h.sel Campbell - ; , Swim,. John Wallace. Time of guile, hoina. • . . . , The "Democratic Stamling CoMmittee"- met., pursuant to call; at 'Feather's Hotel in .th is Dor- , ough on Sattirday last; j Not only the members of . the Committee, but the innumerable host-of 0f7.- fice-seekers of the Shake Democracy; were Pres ent, -engaged in hand-Shaking and in the usual, • indispensable - whisky imbibition:Tho caudi; ' dat e s for- Sheriff wore I there, and two of them.. -IsaacVlard, of.Pottaville,and Conrad Graeber, of Tusearora,.becameinvolvedin a warm discussion: in regard to theirrespectiyemoral and intellectu al qualifications for the office; their popularity with the masses of the harmonious Demoeracy, and their respective_ hances forthotiominatiou. The war of word's raged louder and leader, fierce:-. and fiercer, interDersid: with. snch elegiturand • imPropriateßs as "Samundrm. 3 .-,w-" rascal," "liar,". etc., bandied from.:42Nrg:to the other, until ' suddenly isaae.' l :,ftwt" came iu contact with Con rad's nose./01, the latter sank to the floor over -ainie by the co-oparatiye force of Feather's wide ky and Isaac's muscle:'' Satisfied withfiret blood, Isaac, stalked* niaj^.stically away.and . Conrad wee borne to a lounge in- the reading room to re-' pose alter the combat. The 'eicand -round will come cff, it is anticipated, on the 19th of August.. ' New.M. 1 .4 -.61. ev. Firit Q. .8 ev. Pull M. 16 8 - .0 ev, . Tart. Q. St -9 40 • mo, .New M. 39 11. 4t .ev. Now/ 3 rf.—m • 12t , : 'fBc• GQ,'• .18 .. , t2 go • .. , . . • Alms House flepor'l.;—The ' regular' monthl y meettug.of .the Directors of the Poor of •Schuyl- - kill Contty, was held* the Alms House, July-1, 1887. Present, R. 02. Wilsonj. Orcirigi Jr., 13. T. Hughes.. . - ; 1 . - • . ' ' The - following' is ttici' census: of the. house for the month• ending judo 30,-1867: • ' ; .'. . -•. No. of lumateiin the; HmleAty 31, 1867.: - 353 It " - - , 1 • ' '.° June Se, 1867. ; 349 1 . . • Dem °Use last month''. ' ' 7 No. of Inmates in tto House June 30, 18M.. 118 ". to same time this year • 30 • . • Decrease tliis ' • Of the above. 62 -are.ineane and Wit:Ale; 83 un- dor medical treatment; 69 children. • " Amitted tinting tlielmonth, 32; ,discharged' and absconded, 33 ; bound ont, 3 ; born, 1; died, 4: . Lodging aUd meal were furnished to 167 per- Knot. • ' • - • • `Out-door relief was granted to• 132 persons, amonnting to $lB9 23. .- Bills were read, and orders were drawn, amonnt , Mg' to • j . • '4134 81 Previous i55ue,....1.... ..... 36, . 066 18 Total in 1867,. . 4 -Grand 7emperana4 benfoigstraturn:—The tem perance orders of Schnyhill County purpose, hold ing their annual parade and.pic-ele, at lambency City, July 25th, 1867:- The demonstration • hist year, was at Alinersville t and was a grand success, notwithstanding 'the inclemency, of the weather. ' I ' • The temperance fnrce will make a great rally, and an attractive an d iitnposing display. . The follosvieg ie the -County Executive Com- Mittee" who have the matter in charge: I. S. Huber+, Pioneer Temple, No. 31, T. of H. W. S. 'Claillson, llelirnce Div. " 'l2l, S. of T. C. K. Taylor, Crystal Wztve T. " 27, T .of H. B. F. Crawshaw, St.l,Clair Div. " 541, S. of T.. J.'S Dawle.y, Pottaville Dine. " 52, S. of ,T. D. T. Hendrick; Olive Branch Lodge, No. 224,,1. C. Frantz, White Stet Lodge, Igo. 228, 0.. orG. T. 11. D. Boas, Enterprise Division " 311, S. of T. G. Martz, Monutainl City T. " 24, T. of'll. P. Zohier; Bright Rear Ludge".23l, I. 0. of G. T. M. Ault, United Division, 79, S. of T. - •T. Hoffman, Colorado Star Div." 25. S. of T. J. Mathias, Loyal.Divi.ion,_ " 11, S. of T.. There will. be an, abundant . display of flags,. evergreens, banners.;-emblims, •Several bands will also be id attendance.. . Invitations have, been sent. to manY distinguish ed gentlemen;', among Whom we might mention our staunch "Gov. J,ohn-W. Geary, .and Ron. Ed ward Carswell, the Celebrated orator from Cana da Vest. .• . Those who wish to spend a pleasant day should not fail to bo present. . Change N ed in the Time of holding. Sunday School.—There is not a little complaint on the part Of teacheriand scholars in Sabbath school concerning the time of holding the •regnlar sm.siona. during the sum; mer. On the hot Sabbaths of Jane:July.; August and September, the children are subjected to attend -school In the very warmest portion of the day, and are kept sweltering in .crowdedMOMS from half-Past one until -three o'clock. This to a most trying arrangement for the: little ones, and life not a matter of surprise that they 'complain. On the otherhand it Is imposeible for teach,. era to command the attention of *their pupils and in-. strum them properly. i It does not seem right to select the afternoon for Sabbath school, 'as that is the time when the children art the least ant to learn. The mat ter could be remedied by Wilding the echo* in the• morning,- say at eightwelock. There is not- a family ; in town that could not have the little ones ready for school by eight o'clock these long -summer morninge'• and then. invigorated by a night's rest, with their • minds bright, and their mornings pleasant, they would .be enabled to learn and remember the instruction re-' ceived. In. behalf of both teachers . and scholars we appeal to the various churches to have the hour of Sab bath school changed to eight o'clock in theinorning. By this arrangement also the chi!dren would also 'be enabled toattend chuich. All boys and girls should by. all means attend public worship once on Sabbath. This they do not tinder the present arningenient. , -//arris; bury Telegraph. :-1 . • • The above. we copy for . the . purpose of endors ing it, and calling; the , attention of the different churches of tills Borough to the advantage Of .holding amortting:in .placw. of -an afternoon ses -Biol3 of each Snnd,iy school. :Trinity we believe, is the only- church in this; Borough, -which has made the change; but we. trust, fer the sake of the -comfort of the little children of - the. different schools; as well as for their moral and intellectukl benefit ; that the plan of holding morning instead -of afternoon Sessio'ne, will be adopted. Superin tendents and, teachers, will participate in. the ben efit of Mich a' change; while they Will upon trial, we are sure, apprOve it. . - • : • . . . The _Erection of 47eel Works iii Schuylkill Coun, ty.—We are indebted to the Secretary for the fol lowing minutes of an adjourned meeting of those interested in theerection of steel works in this County :. , • .1 - • - .• . • . . - . , Scirott.sitt HAITN, Juno 99tb, 1947. An adjourned meeting was' held at Koons , Hotel in. Schuylkill Haven. this (Saturday) evening, to rccuive the report of the committees - appointed at a previous meeting. to solicit subreziptions from the citizens of the County for the erection of a steel works lathe County. The minutes of tho last meeting were readand ap-• proved: . . The President ‘ Gideon Bait, S.Sq.; stated that the Committees , eported having received stibectiptions flap, to this time.) amounting to one hundred and twenty ihousand'doilats, and he had, no • doubt but that they would be, increased to 5450,000 dollars in the County. - - Ile preferred Schuylkill County to take all the stock, as he believed it to to oitelot the best and.most profit-. able buriness in. thita,country. • : , Be would:however, solicit subitcriptions from persons. residing outside the county. '• but who felt an interest in the 'affolretlf the County:" but should they not con. tribute anything.tolard the project, he promised that himself and ether getelemen (rather than see the enter prise fall througli.) would. largely inerease their sub scription. He considered the. Bessemer promo of mountactUring steel ti success la this country, andialao regarded this project as a success He stated that Mr. • Griffith, Mr' Clayton and himself would visit Pniladel- - phi& the coming week, for the: purpose of soliciting, subscriptions to the Project.. •• , - • Major J . :mei Wren of Pottsville, etatedthat with the knowledge he had of the iron business, he could readily see the great otivantitgee to be derived from the erection of steel works in. ;this County.' He invested in•the project; having oknbwledge that if, properly conetruct ed, it would be successful,- and that all those interested . would be benell.4. t He stated that he was in favor of locating the works at the bust possible point forthe In terest of theVorks,!ang all concerned. Ale urged up on all who' felt an !interest .in the project and in the County to anhecrlbe;aronce- • ' • Mr. J. B. Keefer egiggented "that Mt nearly enough money had already been, enbccribed to erect the steel works; that the subacripion be conducted with a view to erecting a rolling !Mil, for the , purpose of numulathl - rin ja 'l m tee o l ti ra on i , t h e ix road =g ' -, adjOurned to meet at this . place on next Saturday evening, Jaly 6th.. ' The Horse Fair Which was in program /as • week, at the Agriculteral Park grounds "in 'this Borough', terminated its promedings on Saturday afternoon last. ,f • . • The following is a summary of the trials of ' 'Dreamier, 27th. Trotting match":! i iiiile heatsbest three in' Apt ;. E. Beffner's " • 1 1 .1 • - . Lot Byerley's s. m. o . 2 ' 2 '.2 • • ' Thai), 9:19-3A3--9:05: Thinning match 4 single mile .dash ; . premituo, ' S. Waanet ' s. blind aped Tim,". ;1 • - S. Refferty'e s. h., . . J. Charles's b. h., ... , . Trotting match: double team ;'mile heats—beet ' three in Are;.premium, 925. • C. i 1. . Tine 9:25-919-9:12. ' Trotting match smileheats—best two in three; E. Heffner. :. "..• . ... 2 1 1 J. Vandyke,. l " ' • ' I'2 2 • Ti m e 2:1 - 2 1 1.9 . :611 : 43:1)5. _ Witting match ; mile heatit- : best three is five premium, ISO. I - • W. Heffaer'ssb. h., 2 2 2 C. Seltzer's h. .m:,.. , ...::. 22 1 1 2 ./ohn Quires 88.3 - 1 ." • ' • ' • Piciaw : matsh: mile heat beattwo-in ,thite • Premiums".lM . . • . • C. H 4 c,iaer'il," ..... et. Faast's . • . State match 'three An five D. Boyers h., .... 1 . 1 1 -John Qam's m:, - - 2. 2 _ C. Seltzer'. • 8 _3 3, - • . Time ' 2,:nittleirace took; premhuis; 818. Wm Lowther; Robb: Williame aad.Thoe.trripeon e's• tee ritalett. 4 Lowther's -you: • Slagle '-mtle daith throirih theses:As sat °they .spors soave . went re .the °miss. 'lime, somerldag"lees:Ulm halt an Loin• - - The prep t i i i3 doitid 'race, , half: Ulm; dugizt • tam; Mmpetitorttvers' '..Toe:;llB..tv , ..IRivresi - Burr i nf,. °there, *twee 'pimps' iiivb,velioi‘ leiruaL: Bea esirdtr easily. rbfkatiatampo'clatiNtl • ir r aosookaxid • .Tbe.,,suraispi.*b . were Itnittezial - by,. 4itodliat sada ICkti - Nktsvitki Ittel, BsW "St6runer."-:-Cin lEttliaday: evening 'FianirliaMeere,Vastor of the Methodist' pal (litttrek thialkmnrgla:Consinded his in:Mk' ' , -ably beatiful nessnonsn Stuniner.: His test wia the twentieth ':*: .4 q m ot the "eighth chapter: rff • Je.remish,-• a The reittrallts E• the 11 MMer - ended, and - we -not ea . Mr. -klocalfalius guage- was as . gorgeons as. the season;_tin the • rewpleggleht.besuties of: vrhieb he dwelt with the lerrorrif s tree enthusiast and lover of. thii rileudere otlfititri; ' Nis descriptions of, ii sunset on - the - Strilta of Mackinaw, of the scenery of lake Superinc,;:efr.seannmareliowersod its effect. on vegetation, of a moonlight night, of the beau.- ..ties 'of our own hills; adorned at -this season b tLeriohlyeolueed arid:el3 strainer sh aped lintel, • were Bei fine, that it would be folly to attempt to give even • faint Mess of them in s brief notice. -Stich a dieriourae . mast 'be heard .or' read. at length to be fully appreciated, • -• • . 'a ' . .There Osinany us this community 21to Can en , ' inle Mnoree admiration; Of the. :beauties' peculiar, to h` eicof the'l3eSSOnS, and who. experience great satisfaction. in listening to his themert.which . embody so much thought, magnif icent word painting, 'and appreciative taste.— Those who cannot, are to be pitied; for the study. and love of Nature,. thrOugh • her ttultifirione works, elevates the tastes, enlarges . ..the mind, 'and brings this...heart Jaeamr to their Maker. In his efforts to strengthen:U:ll's. taste, through-the medium of his masterly sermons on the seasons, .111. i. Moore hasthe god wiiheti,of every kindred _ . sympathising ' - Erreillre •Fire Apparatus:-Through , tins Eng lishpress arid pape.s of our principal cities,: we have inen'aware for acme time, of the existence of a little apparatnafer extinguishing fires in an almost incredibly short aps.ce of time. OnTues, day last our citizens were favored with an exhi bition cf its power, by Mr. 'Samuel Simons, of No. 1.09 Chestnut, street, Philadelphia, who is tho General 3fanager of the agency for the introdue. tion of the Extinguisher into this State. ftfr. Simou'a visit to this Region, was principal ly, for the object of. attempting "to eitinguish a fire in the mine of Mr. Brock near Ashland, but what might have been easy at the outset with the Extingultiher, is now rendered impossible by that means, in tgeisequence of the presence of large 9nantities of explctsive gas in the mine, and the impossibtl, ity of approaching the fire close enough tense the apparatus. Being defeated in that ob ject, Mr. Simons very kindly gave our citizens on Tuesday, es stated, an opportunity of witnessing the effective power of the Extinenielur. ' He had &frame structure about ten feet high and six wide, erected on 'a vacant lot opposite the Depot of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad. Shelves lined the interior. On these and on the floor he spread a quiu3tity of shavings, and satu rated them with eual oil. The baildwg was fired and soon became a complete mass of flames the beat from which drove the spectators to a'die tance of thirty or forty feet from it. Mr. Simons then applied the Extinguiaher, and the the was completely suppressed in less than &Minnie. The stream thrown-is.about one-eighth of an inch thick:. The' chemical compounds used are simple and cheap, and the preparation used can be readi ly made by any person. The apparatus coneiats of a sheet iron can, made of various sizes, containing from ilve to ten gal lons.-"lnside of this can is a small tuba that ,ton taine some ingredients for generating/grases that effectuidly extinguish any fire or flame. When the gas is generwed, the pressure upon the interior of. Hie cam amounts to considerable, as the water,a7userbing the created .gas expands it to B.l..vnit twenty times its original volume. A tuber pipe in attached, to the cap, and a email_ nozzle is attached to the end of the rubber pipe_ By turning a cock at the side of the can, to which the pipe is conneeted, a stream of the gaseous' contents of the spore , us can be thrown to a- dis tance of sheen forty feet, and iu quantity suffi cient to extinguish a leige fire, Saraps are at tache& to the can, and it can be strung on a pot ; son's'beck or shouldere, and can readily and al most hastautaneonely be transported from place to place. The apparatus may be prepared and may stand ready for action fur years,. and at the end of thet perm(' will be ready for instant use,, and will be just au effective se on the day when it was firstmade ready. The experiment of Tuesday wr sso patiefactory to all who witnessed it, that the Extinguisher will have no difficulty in finding an introduction into this Region. Fur colheriee whit their huge frame structures. breakera, engine homer, etc., it will be an -I , ,oemeneable requieito to: protect thorn rfinctnally, and thus malice the premium no their in,•urance. It must come into general 1:1813 in towns where the houses are almost alto gether frame, sidle its presence even in places where the fire apiiarattis is effective, would be valuable.' . We have spoken than somewhat at length: of this apparatus, solely from conviction of it' great utility and value as ass means of saving life and property from deatruction by fire. The Fotirth,--The weather 01:1 Thursday. was thAt 'cor.td be 'desired for, the observance of this national festival ; • and . e.terybody seemed deter-: mined to enkiy it irr.t.lie bpst attainable manner. In'themorniiig. a national salute was fired, and the American flag was diiplayed inyll quarters of thp . Bormigh, giving the-towu quite a holiday ap- • • The . Americin Hoeo .Company left in'the oarly Valley train for Tamaqua, to participate in a pa rade there. Tho'Company numbered fifty-two rmiippcd members, and took. with it its caniage: As. usual the inembcfs of this fine Company pre -. seated a'splendid appearance. They returned at' 7 in the evening, havingenjoyedthotiospitality of Tamaqua. hugely. At pi o'clock A.. M., pursuant to notice given-by haiid-bills, a, large audience many being ladiee, assembled in the Court -Homo to celebrate the Ninety-first atinivosary of American Indepeud- $36,203 02 eneo: - The room was tastefully decorated -with Ameri can flags and with portraits of thti Fathur'of his country. . • • . • Theineeting organized by calling to the chair Benj. W. Cumming, Esq„ and appointing •Gen. J..l{. Sigfried, Henry Auman, J4B, M. Beatty, Major Jas Wren, John C. 'Harrier, Geo Martz, . and Andrew M. Gray, Vice-Presidents and F. B, Wallace, C,.s, Dangler and J. A'. Mr PllB5M9rO Secretaries.'.• - Joseph McCool opeed the exercises with. a - f?rvent prayer. . The German Saengerbund then sang the Star. Spangled Banner. ' •. This was followed by the reading ef. the Decla ration of Independenee PR: man in his Usual excellent manner. • , •• Another song was then sung by tho' German Saengerbund Society. .- • ' • • Rey. Feankliu Moore then deliterpd an oration, occupying about au hour and a quarter. It was an .able', eloquent and impressive diiconne: its conelusiou he paid-a just tribute to the patri- . otism of POlpeylVardi flUd Of so - signally evinced' during, the Rebellion. Ile. eulogised the. living heroes, and paid a t, , uching tribute to thesacred dead, who fell in defence of Liberty and Hunan. Rights._ Mach thought and searching analysis ire emliodied in thediscourse which, is a masterly production; in fact one of the finest ice ever heard. , - ' When Mr: Moore had finished with a splendid peroration, Mr. Martz offered'tbe following reso-• elution which WaS uctinimonsly adopted • ' 71eso2rd, That the thanks of tins meeting be offered to the Rey. Mr.lloare for his 'eloquent and patriotic oration, and that he be requested.if_ compatible with his convenierice, to furnish a copy for publication: ' • We might state that Mr. Moore appreciates highly, - the compliment bestowed, upon him in the above resolution, but that bis time is so incess antly occupied, that he fears he will not be able to comply with the request. We regret.this for it is a production we should feel happy in *' laying before our readers.. " • After a vote of thanks to Mr. Pitman and the German Saengerbrind, a bmediction Wtl.B nonuced by. Rev. Mr. McCoel; in:lathe, meeting adjourned. ' . . An 'impromptu gathering tool: place at the resi dence of L. F. Whitney, F,s . q. An oration was de livered. and the Declaration - of Independence read by Major Garrison, late'. of the -'United States. Army. The assemblage was composed of ladies and gentlesien.. The ladies presented to the Major an elegant bouquet: 'Die response to the lady, donors was one of the•most finished and eloquent that we ever beard on a shriller occasion. This - pleasatit little affair was terminated with the sing ing of 'a number - of patriotic songs. The Nagle Guards, Capt. John G: McElrath., of • Cotubola, reached this Borough about 9 o'clock, and attended the exercises. in the Court House. The Company returned 'home in the. evening:. Meseta. Schnerr,' ilidgivay and Clayton, assisted materially% by personal exertion; .to,: render the visit Of the Company pleagant.. • . • - Ju the afternoon a grotesque band paraded, causing much amusement. • -- • • Rockets, roman candles, and a atormaccompa nied .by vivid lightning:' and'. heavy , thunder,' wound op the day. . . . • Among the incidents we might.note that, there were about the usual number, of fights between .parties who had swallowed too much 'whisky. Du nng a . fightina\beer saloon, in Minersville street, a man named 11*hael Mason was stabbed in the head, butlhe-wound was not considered danger- A plc nic -was held, in the . Agricultural Park grouudeen the Fourth. During the day a diffi cultY arose in reference to the dancieg, and a . fight took place during which a man named Burns"; of Mechanicsburg, and a man named Enoch were Very badly beaten.. • • • In the .morning the roof of the residence of Adam Fraez in Market etreet,• opposite Mount Laurel Cemetery; was destroyed by fire. The cause of the fire we did not learn. • . The roof of, the dwelling of Dr. bowman in Mi= nersville street,. was also, slightly damaged by fire, canoed by fireworks. • . -- • - A little son of Mr. B. F. Lord, reeiding Schuylkill AVenne was burnt but not seriously, in consequence of 'his clothes taking fire' from a are-cracker.. . ' . . . At an early hour the Humane eteimer was test ed, during which the 'crown plate .of the boiler was injurel: She was however, ready, for, service during:the 'day. Fortunately, there - wee no: need fOr the - .services of either of • the steamers on Thursday, which was rather remarkable .as the' whiz, pop, bang, of fire-Crackers; , double-headed dachmen, clu3ers, etc., were incessant all day; . The Weather being very warm the consumption of ice 'cream Wlll2l immense, while those who went Tick-nicking; arid many 'private parties were out - ~ were subjects of envy to those. who remained all were In town.,• • I.' Sanford'a troupe' performed at Union Hall in the eveningisand had a largo audience; • :The evening train from Philadelphia wrie.cori siderably behind time in its arrival here in Conse quence of the increasedway pasienger travel on . The Fourth was celebrated in Illinersvilla with considerable enthusiasm. In the morning the Fire Companies and Sunday Schools paraded -through the principal etreete, and made - a very handsome display. The parade took place in the following order : . MMereville Drum :Corps-LEleven Members; uni formed in Zouave style. • . • Mountaineer Rose Co., No. I—Twerity members, in white *shirts and black pants. This Compa ny 'drew their hose carriage, which was very handsomely. decorated with . evergreen, flags and flowers. M. E. Sunday School—Three hundred and sixty six members. This school was the largest in the lioe, and made a v.ry creditable display.— .Quite a large number of the smaller scholani • :bore small td-colored flags in their hands, and a large • flag was carried by thirty:six small bays. : 'A prominent feature in the ranks of this • school was a gilt eagle surmounting a staff, and holding in his beak thirty-el% long stream . era of rediwhite.and blue, each •of which was held by wgirl dressed in white: - _ • Welsh Baptist Sunday School—TWO hundred and .,--•saverity-five !clambers. • This school was prece ded by a very tine banner.. '.A choir connected with this school, sang . several .very good songs ' while the parade wasin motion. . • . Welsh Congregational:Sunday Sehsek 7 LOrte °bun,. dred aid fourteen members. This Wilmot also `':carried every fine banner, with appropriate in-' acrriptions thereon. ' English Lutheran SoadaY SChonl-:One hundred '• - members. This school - .lead a large IJ.nited Statertilag carried by small bois. German .Lattherati &today . School—One hundred andpifiyanty-four•members:. , This school .wee socOmparded by a choir, f thirty-six members. large-flag carried by tvienty,fulir tuna boys ; • ind.arnully decorated tanner with the . name; • of the school thereon...in English and German, ~ a lsoliwparmedls the.pluestion. Welsh Calvinistic Methodist Sandayßehool—aix lumbers. This *shoal. though small iq numbers; was accompanied by ,a fine banner' With appropriated Inscription: . .•• German &Aimed Sunday fiehcaltrie hundred and . twenty inemberir. - l'his.school was _pre ceded bY la:laarinftv; .with allarg•lxitaa on, each MirrinswilltritnuarOudThirtecin;meinbers.. ; ,hintintidneer H 01243 Co. No. 2—Twenty-ono mon.. •hers - Iftdif-companylituilhe othe aeifor•m- doesiortute shirts' and - blaek pants: ;'They taximpaitied by thdlrhose I - Mil:, which was handsomely -decorated AS tbat o - ,f After tile war Wanktiiiitniutkrtila 4Uicitui Standfcareertipaired to the groves severally s euctid by litem;ind Part; .itttiATill "PIT neat apil anjOritOK' ••• - .. . . , . . . . .. .. .. - -„ '. -PlVeeedin;/if — ftf:*43 ,-4 tin : - 'L-A;letafiad; Mooting - 0f r,vmlteldimaTriesday Oani*, litiat.;.:Presenl: -Beataigger, (.1,.. Hefftter,. , .Hall;•. - 41riffttlii._, - ~ U usiael- i .'flrown,;:laientardi; •-• Or4V , 'Thxcl •-- Ziel. ini_4llo o- _ . '; - :lfixtbots, Aria.-13. Hegater'i . presidenti.' : , .4, 2 --,7z ,-- -.t ,, ,,.: , " . - :. - •. - .... - ]... ,•- - • ..,..•'•. - .i -•• - •. - I.diruttets : . ertmeellit9Mittieletiqiiverif••:*4: ' - end; • adoptiad. - -: . - .',,,- , •-5 -, ?!• , -.i,. - ei . , ,,. •*•.:,. -.:1 - .- - : - - - • .1 . -':•'.•'• -:.---- :. • .Pcmmittetkot.Phiartoirfpciriottinreteranitit tit. aCe M int9 OfNiiii*.Pi.4k4: - also list 9r pampa* ar-_. :rented- d niiiiiiiho patkaii4 mo l ithk ones paid, {,o_: ••• .Bill of P..l.:•Orntadistis referred bank to 0001-". mitten with 'power to settle.:: --.: .-: • ••- -' • .' :. :Com, - or I ...: . p and Police reported two wiaen • lautV.PCstern.. - '• CknaMittee was initrncted. to' .replace them- wi th' iron posts, and in the future • to replace - idtpostatin .animilar Manner When Fe - -. • SttrfeY;Cerin., - ..rep)ried sgrAddi.for-Wee ll 4o" • street-es.ablished atid'recordeiL-' . - ' -' •• ~ • Petition - Pray . ing, that St: Clair road, be PPene. to Centie street, wss.referred to St: .Com. --'.. .. ,'. . Petition from Good Intent - •Pire :Company OILy-. log that , its aptatMiiittion' of oci for - D365, be paid, Statement of Borou . g(Treastnei wan rend andorde • . . be. filed. A..conininnication in reference to water running through High street arrossLyefu, and damaging . properly, was':referred to. St:. Coma .• :- ' •• - '• - • .Petition praying' for the opening of. High street; . Flu; referred tollm - SL Coin " -' • -- -, - --•• • • • -- Iteectlutions-of School Board . in reply to i re - Ilitieei recently •adolited by - Council regnestine the i 'Baird to pur2aLl'!go,.7 - Jiatatittenienta of its iffairßi -• I :and to admitreporleri tOrita r aOsions, wae retLl. - l .A - .communication . from Jonathan Wrielit; . a metitber -,. cif-.the: School •Board':frinn the. South- ..: East - Want; was re - lid; .. :-. --•:. , . -: ... - ••.- r, . • Mr: Hill moved thatthe Cominunicatini.of 1t4.- . Wriatit Ate accepted, - filed, - , - tmblisbed in .the•lit4-• 'new .Jannial and Democratic Standard, and tYmt The yeas Ala nays were ealleci,:snd resulted - . as : a Vete - of thanks be tendered to 1i1r..-.NFlighP • ' • - .follows ::• -' " . '. '-- ' , 1- . —.: -' -.••-• Yeas—Messes.. Leonard, ' Poi, Lane ;; XiilL..C.... 'Heffner, f3eitzinger, and - f 3..• "unfroer, Tres'.-7. :• ' Nava—Meters. :gichols,. Kienzle„:Brown,'. Rua- , eel, Shearer, and Oriffttb,-.5. -: - • ' --/.• • ..: ••••••• ••• So the r6solution - was adopted. • - ••_;•-' -• • ••• •• On motion of Mr: 'Hill it was , resolve r} that the of the School Board ttleyhtvern pub- - lished'in the llinera7 Journal of June -,d, as part" •of .the proceedings of the -- Boards be. aid on the The. COinmunicisticia of Mr. Wright is 'lO fol- . . - ..T0 she lioeOrnble 'the Tow Council of the lltiairough. - of Pet toy as a member- of the Pottsville Schein) Heard. frota.the new or 80Mb-east Wark • desire Ms an humble member: of 'said School - Board; to lay my vtewr, dimentino.froin the majority of the Board, betore,yotr honorable body. on the recent action of the mejoritytif. the hoard rola tive.to your oammanicattore of Juror 4th. directed :to' the Pottsville School . Board, Politely requesting the .School Board, as a mailer of interest to the tax-Payers of the Borough; to allow reporters, to be present at our. meetings of the • School' Board :and retort finch pro-, ceedinge in the rublit papem. toe the information Of the tax papens; the satir"". ear Board of. Town Couti ell and:hog. :„."-?.. -- oitneeseia. you received a reply in the elope-et Ooesolution. from' the School Board. passed. whe.the following &embed; of the hoard were Ares-' eat r-13tiyer.,-Wrigh • t. Wells; Little, Marti, Fox;•Lin deiamuth, Smith' and .Roetterry: all voting In favor of the resolution exceptnayself." - : • IS3W fit to differ from all the members present - for the reasons I herein set forth. : First =I then and now think voOr request Wto not out of plate and ehonid have receive' at the handset the:School Board a reply aroteeecieg in • your suggest lion. But, gentlemen: I IMUTe .yQu, " I was the only ~ small and d . that stood by the Town I Council in their "efforts at torn , 'to carry out what they and I - deem clue to oar con-tit - font's.: To be:con sistent with my own.poeition in this matter. I had to , oppose 'section - by section the resolution as it eame • from the hands of tier. • cornmittee for sideetion by the tioaro,orll elionldhaye lilted to had itpublislaedjust us the.committee reported it . I should have much pre ferred it, as it must come before you and the public, that It Should appear in all its - original deformity with all I its aerostatic grins, its - venom, muck and slime heaped "upon - the heads of the "Borough 'Fathers," he they • see fit to term.yon.. But the monster, when we came .to look at it by good - gas light; looked "so hideons in : the eyes of even some of its own authors; that Its shape and tone was greatly, Modified • Some seemed to think 'it would be lowering the diroity or the School Board before the eyes of : the cornminiity. - if Fuel ' a document was sent you in reply. - . to your communication and one of the-great troubles the author. of f his-indecent" -as it-=reply to the Borough Citimell, was to fierce .upon the amount, and what parts of its deforai ity etionld boextracted and new parts inserted. S.tne complained that:. it. wan not eevere . enough : - Mho a tholight It had Utilise the language of-the chairman of the committee: net too much it:vinegar in it", while era again thought' it savored entirely, too much of the ."sinegar." , And in t his way of striking out and insert: ino. In this imiecent liiiraugne..purporting to be.'a res olution intended as a reply to the "Borough Fathers,ii: we had quite a prolonged session until the - midnight hour of twelve Informed the fliends. of:the restilui lon. that already too much time had been Spent uselerOlY in trying to draw the "sheep' skin ever theyvolf s cat caste" As you - and, the public will still seethe -wores tail" is ellekinO out, shooing the memo almthet as visible as .though.o.appearerrin its original deformity. The res. .olution say.+ your commitnica non "islikely to itOject this School Department of the Bort - mob to a wrongful - Imputation in the public mind."" 1 think it shreald sub ject the board to Imoroper imputation, and they ought: .to hear it for not, being willing to take good anti whole 'some advice.from frieutlS, Again.ehys.the resolution, "The School Board toe formany years pant regularly published the - aninni :statement Wile tyain of the district required by law ; and evee tench more, • addrog a Variety of statistical infermation, not lestallyramired. hot whatever was aim:ared robe et tublie interect, and the wonder is how emit publication could bare eer. taped the - notice or astute Councilmen whom at may reasonably he assnmed'ema and do read the tiewspa- - pers.'. It is well that the public ahoald know in what. .way thin publication i 'made of the affairs or the School Board. - The act of . Assembly provide. that an, annual statement he riled with-the clerk of the Court r gnat-. ter.Sessione. • I ask in the name of, commen sense, how many.people go to look up the sit( of-Asserritily, to - see how or where the rep* is published, an: if they, did, who wants to.be going to the clink r f the sessions to examine this matter : perhaps. tie is Mld at Mist: at a official duties, and.has no time to run and hunt up this, report. one particularly :without compensation: why tot publish it in the newspapers, as the CounCil - re - questedi they . might as well fur all practical- *pesos heir fartioma in the sea. - 0-ink can .give .you au-inkling why some are so 'opposed to a motion I made and Could not iven7gete el n glee:ember to Second' . it, to 'publish onr.flnancial to :hoe. it will be seen in., he 'following from the record.d. proceedirg.:of .June, 18(17. Present:--.Boyer.:Wolff : Vox. Little,'. Martz. Hodgson, Undentnuth. Wells. Wrleht..Reseber.. r): Smith -Haber and Dar. The arii . ohement of a tax' .collector (sr,the current year beims in order, a propo sal in writin.q from J. 8.. Olew ine *mare:id, offering to collect thedupllcate St 3 perceet. commission i a simi lar proposal was then ro - edfrom Mc John Bindley. of fering, to colidetthe duplicateat 4 percent. commissign, or at any lower prim at which any good responsible man' shored offer to take it at Mr. Wright stated that Mr. •Itliand would collect the duplicate at 2% tier cent. mm-. Mr.:Roseherre moved thatothe commission he flied at 3 per cent. , Mr. Wright; moved at 23; per mnt..Fixed at 3 per cent I then-called for the yeas and -neje on': hat question:although the recent don't show" It. Ayes, Wolff Wells, Heebner, Smith, Little, Lin derimuthoFex,.ll..aleson. ltoSeberry, Derr and Boye.r.. .Nays, Wright, Defter and Compensation, was axed at 3 percent:- Mr. Wright moved. that this vote he published. • On Melton - of Mr. Roseberry, Mr. Wright's innflon.waa pose ported,Tl'. J. Bindley, Mr. J.B. Olewine and Mr.-Riland • weie then Severally - nem; thated for the office of tax collector, and Ihevote being taken, Messrs. Wolff, Wells, Heebner; Smith, Little, Lindenmuth. Fox, . Ilodtrom, Roseberry , - and :Boyer, .10,:voted for John_ Medley. Mescrs. Maltz' and Derr - 2, for Olewine find Messrs. Wright and Iluber- - -2, for RI- • Nand. Mr. Bindley was aceordinglydeclared elected. * At a sneeze:ling needing of.theloattl; June.l9th; I laid be-" fore the. _Board of School - Directors, the following: • "To the Honorable Directors of the Pottsville School I Board. Gentlemeno-1 de-ire to lay my application be-: fore your honorable body: fur the-appom'meet of tax I collector of ihe,Pottiwille School tax. I will collect • said tailor the sum of too pa tent , and ationld bel appointed,-.I promise to glee security ample and lo the entire satisfaction Of the board, and e ill cousider it as a mark of kindness and respect l'ottsville. June 13th, 15:17. Wm. Mland," : And in-connection with this offer I•offered the following for the action of the hoard: "I„.. Jonathan Wright, a Director of (he Pottsville School. Board, desire to presentl he following peptic:Oran and • offer of .Wm, Itiland. • an - old soldier Of the wars of 1812 and Telt, and who tonfributed.three F 0139 to suppress-. ing the late rebellion. and one - of which offered up his 1 fe and died to sustain the flag of his collet:1 - Y, to this honorable hotly as an applicant to collect the school tax of the Borough of Pottsvire; at 'i • per cent,.and where as, the tax Is pot yet laid - end no duplicate 'made out or delivered to John Medley; the appointee, nor any -bond giyea by said appointee, I here ark that the applio cation of said W. Riland, - . be entertained in order that a resolution or vote taken at the:Last meeting of our said' board appointing John Bindle): as said Collect& -may be rescieded, at 3 per cent, when there is an offer to - collect said tax at 2 per cent, by a worthy end patriotic soldier; whooffere to give such security as will. beep-. . proved of by said board for the . faithful 'discharge of his duties," and requested tome member who had voted in the affirmative to ask .:for a reconsideration of the vote at thafoinier meeting electing JOhn Ilindi • ey Tax • Collector at threeper eent. when it was offered at 2% ' and now at 2 per cent. As it was.ont of my power get a reconsideration :In . any other way according to Parliamentary rules, .than by an offer Neat:* from some member who had rated in the affirmative.' to re: ecind, all was as silent ai• the grave on thla matter Ter a moment amongst the members then present, to wit : •"Boyer, Wright, Wells, Little,' Martz ; Fox, Lin- dententh, Smith. Roseberry." . The record.eh•ows the • following action on this matter:" "Mr. Wright .pre-. tented a paper signed by Wm, Riland soliciting the ap paintment.of Tax Collector ot School Tax - for the:cur l. rent,year accompanied, by another ' pare r signed by himself (Mr. Wright) urging Mr. Ttiland's appointment. , The president ruled that. the said application was out of order, there being no vacancy in the office of Tax `Collector for the current year, Mr :.JOhn Bindley having been elected to the same at our last Meeting ; and since .officialtynotifiedthereof:.on motion- of Mr. Wells toe., Seeretary.was :instructed to return Mr. - Rilandla per • thicin - and proposal to. hint with the • explanation that there - was no vacancy - In die office 'Ought for thls year,: but that the School Board would be happy to heat from him to the same effect next year. Adjourned at - 12. o'clock, midnights; :thenstrornie LITTLZ.; Secty." , • Gentlemen; I new wish you and the pliblic to under; • stand whoit isemong thefisteol Board that is willing".to give some particular pet,Tax . Collector 3 per cent: of - the people's taxes, wren an old • soldier; who Is, as will not be.disputedi respected by all his fellow-chi- • zee who know him, 'willing to collect this same tax . for 2 per cent., end threat upon the people of this Bei- . ongh.a man wholly ohooxione to the . People, as the. late election, will show when lie ran for High Conetable of. the:Biagi:oh; that over six hundred .majority was polled, against him: -.I a,,trt, wonder you are is earneat in - wonting to know what we - art: doing with .the pee% plehithottey. • Yoh may Well consider that a body wils • ling to squander: the people's money 'in . this manner,: . might wish to be a eecret,"conclavel". • o . Gentlemen, I nowend. forever. wash •my hands from being. a, participant - in legislating away the al, readooverburdeoed tax payers' money In this manner, - . to any particular pet orperson. Again efiys the reso lution, 'The Board has /lever refused 'newspaper re- Porters to be present." • I know h ow an (Ma imade to have our proceedings published in the papers, Was,. scouted and frOwned nrion..by the Beard. These kind ..of stories will do to tell those that don't know better. Bnt gentlemen, yourselves, Messrs. Huber, Martz, and myself, can congratulate ourselves that this little agi- . tattoo of *a reducti Al for collecting: the .taxes and a .abaw ., a p tax co ll e ctor,- has already had a goodeffect;* ' and Further , the agitation of the matter to - pablish , our' proceedings by your .honorable body and myrelf, haa hadthe.dealred-eficet Mr. Wallace has been Present. at two different meetings, from the Miners' Journal of-. flee, atelldr. Coriard once, from the Standard office.--' They got there by some means; I cannot exactly inform • you how : but I, can inform you it WIM not by anyolll- cial act of the Board. I think the object ' is now at; tanned-no matter whether it in 'done in.lhe way we suggested or not a° that the naatterKefreeteo pad our proceedings published. 'I-subscribe .myself yonrhum• ble servant,• • • J. WRIGHT.. ' - (13 • •ASchool Pirectijr _om ttie " be South - east ' Petition'praying thatgrade GeOrgo and Bsee streets and that George street be cut down, Was to the Survey Commit petition trout Air!ericaii Rae pray ingGotorilitly that additional" ' hone'. accernitirxiations be .farnlehed-then3, was read,, and'on. motion of. Mr: 'Fox it was resolved that'll building . be 'erected in tear of COI:moil chamber for said On-motion of Mr. .' Brown it was resolved that ft ,Special Committee be appointed-to make the im provement. -Messrs. Brown, Leonard; Poi,ansi 'eel and S. Mei:fuer were appointed on the Coln'. =ion praying that property holders o Rhodes Alley he noti fi ed tocurb and. pave. Mel; respective properties; was road, and the Clerk in-:' strut:Led to give the, nand bottom : Matter of filling rip Harrison street was refer red to Street Com. with power to act. • - A committee - from Chpod Intent and Huinini Steam Fire Engine 00MP/raga WM heard. An in, cretes'asewasareacePrrmedPmtiotiCom was.asked for. The•mat-•ni. on Fire Apparatus. • :Subject - of culvert at Second street and Church - Alley .vris referredto-the Et, Corn. , • 'subject o f ,grading Street between-prOpertk of. Bind Patterson estate and Leib property, was' re; ,erred to BurrY.CamlOtte.‘ ' • '• • - The following bills were referred to the • ' _priate o,ommitteert : • Geo. 11.03tichter A SP;4S. B. R. Morris, .. ... . .. ~. 42 90 Pottsville Gas Co., - •.. 008 52 Philip, Steinbach, . ' -.357'36 The fo l low i ng bills were, read and onieredjebe Pala . • • .. . A. Ltkimeng Street hinds, ... . Night .. B. Barr._.... i..; SaauL. 35r. Goeds •• - E 0 2 4 Bqer, G3od'b.tent Tire . Co.„ VreTknA ei Total, ... . 4eummw-. =MS BWitZERLAIID- pes.Felptilimi : *lr : site- Aituatain , Scenery, Mianate . :ta*lnc,:thititTettpd. ;hum Toth; 011116=A:the priiitylitt*laitistratmer Co:Madre, littl:::turtett (thaf:,l Well; alwitys h&d M 'pleasant Ce memhetutce,) and - 'mike inVattircaithe fonthein Shoriforthelalrei• hem r joaiiieied atoOt ovei the:Alble chain of mono •haltoritiZat;idlatatte,of about ehtteklAtlibn: irr view of the heautlful scenery, the healthful recreation, and the plinuntiOncittentes anaciated. with thlistrip, : did :1 hava the least meislomte reFiat the small tozionnl; of .Ishor and fittlgne Matrr4therehy.. : r From the top- ' of,the thislionntain : thie prospectprospect embricinitialch, Al the entire like, with the nuMerous' vino' and towns that adorn itsgradnally-slopinggmen shams. interspersed here and there with beautiful vino; yards growling under the promise of a rich harvest, ,virus one that the eye lovedeb di ll open noi would it be eatlited With a single esjoyment. but ever and , atrqu.l Tenn d ; rest ' me at upon ikke, *An . :girEA and leek spread Mitheroiente: to,say.Mithingefitindry bite of Mead and cheese, by :way Of dessert:. Abnitorw-thirdolvay;thur ney extend- . ed along** r hi idew of the river Slhl,.that Tone delving; skipping pinYibily through cnum and ravines„• .with every imaginable linincement'fai the *rely. and wily trout, until It. empties Into the lake . at Zarlch.- Ifere..b ? o,llartheld the Bel really line Slsalse barn, of a. heard so tench, and NO:Orli-4 teals 'I had looked for in valn, so that I almost began to .ens peet. them to be ia mythical . The farmers were busily emPhiyed at hay-making, and they looked so cheerful nnd hippy withal, and their dweiling-Places so refreshing and attractive, thit I reenlvedlo abide it day or two With one of these familiea, andPartiapate with its themhere a short paroxysm of rural pleasure and fatigue. . 'With this object L picked whit lovely andenticing home, cleeebY the river side, and after si little difilialty is satisfy lug its . Inmates Wit . I was not, 'after al ;-e traveling vagabond, I Was received in 'their midst, and remained In clover' for the ;followingtwo The first of these I gamholed in the field, armed With a rake, at blitLely.as my untrained nerves would let me. - It Is tine this was a little romaniic,..consider ing ail things but I needed no tonic to promote an !ap petite, nor bitters to help digcst that which I ate for supper. Upon the *bole, should many years timid the borne circle of my own loied ones, it is . not llkely that I will soon forget the day when I. was Par' making in Switzerland.. The second day was devoted to piseatorian pleasyre and -with _the 'rod and dy I' meanderteen the stream,.. "enticing. the finny trilie to engnlph denrcplated menthe a barbed.honk, .apint - Fhoie point. was dainty allurement." This was attended hy : it little 'yeritki.n:for 'the 'tarns' thinks would not. bile in comformltY with reyideati of . the Swiss laws 'of nature. though` with perseverance • and dexterously following up every nibhie that came'. - rdong,l managed towards sundown, to return to' mine host, Herr Burkli; With a right prwentaide mess of - • .. • • The following morningl departed, not without feel lugs of regret, from that excellent family, and contin• ned my travel through the still beauteons country that lay before me. Having passed a number of statues of the Virgin Illstry. andrepresentattons of the crucifixion, I enquired of a coral:rhymer' whom I passed, 'whether the. Catholic iellgioe prevailed here, when he answered me : • Oh, yea; It prevails this side of yonder thidge. that you passed awhile ago." Here was a line of de markation—a solution of a knotty queition, that was exceedingly graphic and tangible. Preachers have de= fiued 'the church,'" and authors of great concordances and commentaries expounded it. without ever letting' the world into the' secret that the different denomina tions are separated by bridge!, over which one can pass from one aide to the other with wonderful facility This melee countenance was expressive of each a thor ough conviction tbat it is impossible for either Catho lics or Protestants to exist on the wrocg side of that bridge, that if I had agectused him, what is the differ— !ace between Catholfriffn and Protestautism f I be lieve he would have answered me, the river Slid, sir." ..tid I bad walked over the bed of this river, wading fr m right to left, bade and forth, catching trout on botb eides of themedhua line, without prejudice or partiali ty, and without ever dreaming how errionsly Incon stant and vacillatingl was in my religious persuasion ! I have related this Incident as an illustration of the ab rupt manner in which not only religions faith, but dia lect; drem, habits and customs of. Ilfe take rt change. -not simply in different nations, but in sections of the same nation : so that in ft day the traveler,may einem ter quite a number of thee charmer without getting outside of the jurisdiction of a eingle prince. Arrived at Zug, I took a small steamer that plies on the pretty take of the same name, and which though only about eight miles long. and ttvb wide, has never their's& places over fifteen hundred feet in depth, and prOceeded to Art, a mall town at the foot of the 'mountain Rig!, and of the famous. Rossberg, the sum mit of which in 1506, precipitated itself down into the beantiful valley beneath. covering three villages, and burying alive some five' hundred human beings—filling up also, with 1 e huge debrie , one-third of Lake Lor berg. Here rundertook the steep ascent of the Big afoot, and after nearly four hours of uninterrupted and bileome walking, had the satisfaction of gaining the summit just in time to witness what is termed by those who are petted, a tine sunset and I was told thathun dreds of trayelers ascend the Biel, and remain there for days, only to be disappointed hi the end; for clear days; when there lino fog or cloud around this mountain top, are the exception and not the rule. On the following Morning, too. there was a magnificent sunrise, which I would love dearly to describe; but . it would need an angel, and an eagle•a quill, dipped in liquid amber, to depict the glory of that heavenly light, as its effulgent beams appeared , in;lanceolate points„ darting high into the.heavens, then spreading far and in all directions along the horizon, and gilding with radiant splendor, the anew.crowned Alps, that here extend as far as the eye can reach, and among which the echoing notes of the Alpine horn. greeting the rising sun, joyously re.. "From peak to peak, and rattling crags among," long atter they.have, ceased to bane from the instru ment. From here a distance of thirty miles can' be seen in every direction of the compare, and the pane rania that Is presented of the long chain of Alps Is not equaled from any other point, except perhaps, that of the natal mountain, which also, is close' by here, bat yvhich Is still more frequently enveloped In clouds and fog than the nigh . • On the top of this mountain Is kbotel, celled the Rig! Kuhn, which is a tine structure, and of sufficient capacity' to accommodate several hundred visitors.— All the timber and material of which this building is formed, as well us the vast quantity of provisions that is consumed when thronged with guests,. during the' summer months. were and are carried up on the backs of mon and pack mules, as no team can possibly as cend. It is not practicable to descend this mountain in the winter, though I am told of two -persons, man and wife—istonishing to' say—who have, been toted willing to be snowed up on that cold, dreary peak da rieg six months of the year, with' no society but those of the eagles and the stars. They mast be either ex ceedingly fond of each other, or terribly put out with "the rcstof mankind." Before winter sets in they frre provided, with all the stores and necessaries of life to support them comfortably till the: fallowing spring; bat what either would do •In the case of sickness 'or death of the other, his impoeible to conjecture. • Oh, solhude ! where are the charms 'fhat sages have seen in thy face Better dwell, in the midst of alarms • Than reign" on this very high place. • I descended on the side of the mountain overlooking the Lake of the Four Cantons, and arrived after two and a half hours of labor more telling on linib and muscles than the climbing up had been, at: the little town of \Veggie, whence with a steamer, I proceeded to Lucerne'.. This is a city most delightfully 'situated, fixing from the North the' most interesting of all the Swiss Mies, with the towering, cloud-capped Pilatus to the right, and the.malestic Meth the left. •But of the town itself there tenet a great deal to be said, except of the truly beautiful and romantically situated lion monument, erecter' to the memory of the Swiss guard who stood and euffered in. defence of the King at the commencement of the revolution in France. Except also, of the great, organ—said to be the largest - in the world (except what' my. American friend , calls "our Boston Blower)—in the Stiftskirche, which does In deed, predate a very monstrous deal of intises—too much In fact, to enable a body to distinguish the mu sic.. Thus I heard what at first I took to be the Anvil Chomis from, Trovatore, with about a dozen anvils, half a dozen cymbabs, fifty clarionets, and a hundred trom bones thrown in promiscuously; when I was agreeably aurprised to find out that It was Old Hundred, and not the Anvil Chorus after all. I had never heard that sol emn, time-honored tdr produced in such an exceeding ly lively and boisterous manner before, and an Engliala friend at my side suggested it was •lolly nice for Hold Undred,,weene, it, now t'• Socially, I cannot aayunich in favor of Lucerne. Being a central point for travel ers in Switzerland, and especially patronized by' the English aristocracy, the'people here have been spoiled, and manifests ravenous eagerness for•ahe lime," that detracts greatly from the charm of the retorted virtue and simplicity of • the Swiss populace; and Withal this, the Landlords of hotels receive yon with an air of insufferable condescension, as though in accepting your napoleon they were doing you a favor, and I am free to confess that I cannot see it In this light. On the steitmer. Gotthard I made a tome over, the entire length of this lake, a dlstance of some thirty miles, torFlaelen, &anted at its- extrethelsouthern point. The latter portion of this voyage, that between Brannen and Fluelen, ia exceedingly interesting on account of the picturesque grandeur of the acenerythat here environs the blies on • both sides. Here redo, pointed opt to the Meager •the Teliscapelle, a 'mum chapel erected over the great, fiat moue= which Tell sprang from the boat where (leder was taking him a prisoner to his castle at Kusemacht. From Finder I proceeded a short distance Per -outhiline. to Altdorf, where the famous teal of Teb, shooting at an apple On hie son's head, is said to have occurted. 'A statue of Tell Is situated on the spot where he stood, and :a fountain on that where.the boy waapilaald, the two be ing a hundred and fifty feet apart ; formerly a linden eree,against which the boy stood, occupied the place of the fbantain. dshort distance frombere is B the home and birth-place of Tell. On the sit= bowie where be was born, Is built * small chapeltotas honor and memerY, the interior walls of which are embellished with imperfect, highlpeoloted paintings, descriptive "of the historical inddesta of the era in which Tell lived; and with oddly-worded, old-fash ioned, proverbial rhyme,. in which the grotesque and sublime are jumbled together with a reckless disregard of atyle, proelety. madman sense. On the outelde the dined Isenhoweeedavith nese bushel thetwere infell scenk bloom, oafraributia ehel l ready to the effectiveness of the Gotthard Pass, Abet brought me view ; of •scenery . I now ecalinced. a• likgiljnira' thh)tlgh. mordreplete with awful-sublimity and the Nine& of - Gods majesty in His work*, than any' hadever beheld. Upwards aed °awards led• the road, until lathe region of perpetual snow, and yet the tops of the monntedus appeared as far awayas ever. Winding along the gor ges, I frequently appeared in a kettle, of which over hewn ;oche, loomiwhithintod- see the eloodsenatestita. ted the tides. and whence el enfi tee Anther than,: * hundred yards in any direction, except ,skywarda„—. Sometime' dote 15.1 the road, over its uneven; stele etrewa bed; divots withillitt•foliftneesid an ante" la the win thethe rent which ceuistitates the riverllness„ pi down trio th e then alijsetrom jenne totrag,- leaping in Widnes* , dver."V 4l 9 l tZ tilt ward; dashing forwards belling, teethinge as it were, inn white sage; blind* likes Weida) ale- Meat that ' lotted hilts own destmetkeetbriees, gew a whelk neadoltethigitaelfmponensaterh. stack, and spirUng a whibidolumteoi spray Onto the .clonds. Around an - *age Of_roclin 'YOU: hear %emit Were in the distance, like "the mattering of low thun der," tberrente Inman again rsablegaloest letiktralt tihnc orffitie, like that of it,tornekt in a ftat of dry, ' Near Andermalt tide eberhi.tmaisoet, 6 foyth,es time by a bridge. thatTs,here Oiled tts Devil% . The newt& re • has Mea t been sn y7eatelo to". bet .the. (Me tenths by_ttaeide, and itneffahatiewheamoin to,the was Abe. wend of -,apwrible. famallet -Oreste- 1 4 MenctstlEar: Alllitalanit. on the 14th of August,Moak It is 41111cidt%t0E•vitogliTO AMP a - iettleA wee sande ht liki.thirr. I:Ikon - at abort .4 alalvoAsethsidge lthett4Peal pit ht% Ms Ayer takes Alba •Lef-Lea .Ittstg_hundraillje s et.: In one dagettbrysgular grammars. fignensalais.,, letdown agorae stsireare. airtfbil flan houref ' to AiNgroWastreorthbussalLibea,ltarl• tfalfoloolllo Bleelen three thoesandlott aseremir ttbuit tharobt by, many sigtenteltentarastinallicratit Preinws , 11 7 : 011)- e /t 4tb it a Cr hlu Ze C i ten' • 11 50 . 134 13 . 322 50 . il . OO • 7'25 . 23' . 00 • 63 u)IW ..50 00 :.: ... :' , ......, 4659:111. ...; .7. 7 98017_ :4/;to4 18 , . . . IR • ,- .41LIIIII.BOLD111 1 ' cog ISD•FI t iIIi,EXTRACI' . • • tßimcwritt4Bßuivilvs . trtog4unms...' Timm, Na .os BITS, EYELIDS, EOLLP, fiEty, . . %glitch rso -dity,ure the . aptieiratmU,. entail:a the 611 tirade or imeretufand removiaFsll taint% theCreni.k mate diaessesi,hoteirttarsor 01-herif l - 9 4 andielakenc toy....siuttilfsuidounntir.s with pierfectarawre. Two Tanuteroosscts of the Extract of SsomParille: -.wattle**. rtisintel-wategis,,equd theadsbott Diet . Drink, and one bottle is equal to a gallon. of the Syrup' of Sarsa. parilla,„or the decoctions as ottany made. AwD,taissarrikraaresstepitialtshed in the Illedico- Chit-arena( Review. on the zubtt of the Extract of Sarsaparilla in Certain erections ,A , Denjamln.Travel; F. R S., dc.. Speaking of those diseases, and diseases arl4l!E from the excels of olorolrf , ha dates that •no ~remedy- la Neal 'to the Extract of Sarsaparilla ; Its powerie extraortimary;mtore'so•than.;env:other drnq I • m acquainted' , with. • It lkin the Strides: sense,:a* tonic with this invulnableattribate, that • it is - applica ble to a state of the system so sunken, and yet so irri . table aaretuttes other Substances of. the 'tonic class ' unavailable or injurious: . - • • ' HELMBOLD 9 S CONCENTRATED EBTROLT • lIIRSIPARIIIC . rds of iS years.: Prepared by.-j - Dicsoire and Cavainar,49lßrnartsray, N. Y. Sold ppaiimrtiggisti. . Jana -8; r , COM ATE CO: es' COS & mi l) , GERMAN 0 &Co ' rn E.RMIVE SOAP %- ' .`siryt), Is raarintacizred from n:ran Y 3. TEILIALS. and may be. Considered. the STArrnixo ov Excirtxxxon.— For sale by all Grocers. • May lgt, NIT ,TO 'COT ' The advertL•er. having .heen restored to health to 'few weeka by a very simple remedy. after-having sub fered for several years with a severe lung affection', and that' dread disease "Consumption—is anxious .to make known to his fellow-enfferers the means of cure. • To all who desire it, hn. will send a copy of the pre- Muiption used (free orcharge), with the directions for preparing and using the same,. whirl they, will dud a ease ONUS far Coasearvort.. AnnitA., Baormarini„ Conans.: Cocos, and nit Lung and Arvid Affections. The only .oltect of the advertiser in' sending the Pro. eviction Is to benefit the afflicted. and spread taarma tion which he conceives to be invaluable, and he hopes e• cr . ) , sufferer will try .hie remedy. as it will cost them nothing, and may prove a blessing. PartleA wishing the prescription, eso,lwr_return mail, will please ad dress • . • - R.VI.-EDWARD A.. W! .807 q , Co.,.NewYork. 40-ly M &V IFL 'CT qA PHYSIOLOGACAL VIEW 'OF I‘l . . • • The Oheapest•Book ever Published.: -. • Contain hag measly • Three ILI unfired pages And 130 line Plates and.Engravhiga of the Arurioniy of. Mellon= Organs. in ii-state of , Heal , h and Disease, with a Treatise on Early Erthis; ita - deplcrrabfp . conze... qttences upon the Mind , and Sody, • with, the •anthoris • plan of. tratment=the only racionsti and4cemiel mode of cure, as Olean by the report et ears treated. A truthful adviser .to ' niarried,i and those Contein plating marriage; who entertain dolibts or thelrPhysi cal condition_ Sent free of_postage, to any address on receipt of 215 cents ,in stamps or imstaife-'currencY, by addressing . D. 'LA. CROIX, . • • No. 3tlllaidini Albany. N. W. • The author may be consulted noon any .of the.die eases 'upon whirl his book treats, either personally or by mall; and medicines sent to any part of the we PREPARED DIG OF . PALM AND MADE Foi . .Premertol . Restoring and . - lienOifying the Hair; . . , . . . And is the Most delighifel .and' wenderfol article the 'world ever produced - • - ... '. - - Ladles 'will. find itmot only a certain, remedy to Re store, Darken and Beautify the Hair, bat Also a,dsslra ble Brittle for the Toilet; as it is highly ocelot - tied kith a rich and delicate perfnme,'lndependent 'of ihe fra grant odor of-the Oils of Palm and Mace, .• ' r THE MARVEL . OF PERU. A new and beautiful. perforaa, 'which in delicacy of scent, and the, tenacity, with which it clings to thi . .tiandkeichief and person is unequalled.' • • The . above articles for sale by all Druggisisand fumerSi 'at $1 pertiOttle each. Sent,by epress to any &bye:Baby Proprietors, . • • • • ' • . •T. W. WiliaiOLT :11e C 0.,. . . -100 Liberty . Stzpet,NE . A...Tork. October 20. 'RR :• • 42-1 Y -• ' Thp•Grealremt!lei Aleinedy. . , . 'DR.. DtPißiCo'S•. • S GOLDEN PERIODICAL PILLS, FOR FEMALES INYALT.IIItE trit'orcrenrna Iturarom.ninn, - Ry;movin . 0 oanuoTtows or Tom MONTHLY. Thalia, nom • - CAUSE, tail? . •• ALWAYS SUCCESSFUL AS • A PREVENTIVE.. . ONE PILL DOSE. • •- . 'Females peculiarly situated. or those. supposing them selves se, are cautioned =inst. using these Pills while in that'Condition less they invite misearriae, atter which admonition, the Proprietor assumes no. respon sibility, although their :mildness would prevent any miselnerto health, otherwise the:Pills are reComifieded • . MOST INIVAPETABLE'.4ENEDY FOR The lk.eitcorrlicea,• or Ilirtiiteis, • •• . And In Remoylng Obstructions: and Restoring Nature ••• to its • Proper 'Channel. Quieting the . Nerves . andbringing -back the "Rosy-color of Health'. , • .to the cheek of tbe.most delicate. • • • • - Pelee Slyer Six Boit. $5: - Sold ,in Pottsville, Pa., by HENRY. SAYLOR, Sole Agent. Ceidie St. ; •• • - -• • . • by sending_ $t eo to.Potterville Post Omen can .have Thepills acne' (confidentially,) by Mall,. to auy part of the country. "free of onstage." H• • - Sold also by .N. COXE, Schuylkill Haven. H. B. DAVIS, St. Clair, and by JOHNSON, HOLLOWAY & COWDEN, Wholesale Agents, pOiladelphia. • ' • June 1, 41:1 - • • . • Moffat's Life Pills and.Phteniz Bitters The wonderful effects of . Moffat , s ISfe Pills in ease 4 o . mental depression or physical weakness, proceeding 'from indigestion, costiveness or 'bilious. secretions, are certified to by'ruillloya of persons who hive been bene-'. llted by . them... They are, the . .most effectii , e cathartic and pdriller ever.beforkhe public, and have ever been In nee'eince 1825. They are cheap;. safe and reliable.— ' Sold.by all respectable dealers everywhere. * , CLIMAX A plain statement of facts.. I inherited Scrofula, and many of my relations have died of IL In 1839 ma , case; was frightful. Tumors and ulcers - spread, until int 642, under the advice of *Physicians, I went •to • Avon Springs; I received benefit—tried every medicine and did everything I could.: I had to rest my arm on a enshian, and bad sot been able to raise It to my head for over a year. The discharge, from two • ulcers wee nearly a pint a dal. '...anipatation was recommended ; but pronounced dangerous:- I could not sleep, and my sufferings were intolerable. A friend - . brought. mean an English physician, who applied a salve with which he said he had atcbmplielied extraordinary cures in the hospitals in Englind. It commenced to relieve; I per. misted in its rise: it finally effected a ezeirecrr am; Es- TIFLE-0171114 It is now 1848. fivoyeare since I had the appearance of a scrofulous sore, and my. health has .been gold ever since. I procured the 'receipt of this wOridetful blessiag of humanity—and have called it "Fiore Casa: 'Seise," and allow the palle t° use it or - not as. they choose. ' Thhi is' a brief but candid statement, given more fully in my circular. OrrizvA, IT. Y., December, 1848.: J. M. PAGE. • • . • • • New Your. Oct; 16,.1866. "I hive known J. M.' Page, RAI.; of Geneva, N. Y., for maniyears. Thais one of the first citizens of West. era New York. I saw him butt week ingood health. Di's case was a most remarkable one, but, actailly tfue 'in every Particular. (Signed) - DZMAII Bairns? We have watched tine unaided but growing favor Of 'fFiaoies Clans: Ssi.vt,” and availing : ourseliei of the knowledge of its wonderfnl curative nowers,.have be comi proprietors of the same: : ' It Is a sure cure for turns, Scaldtc'Scrofula, Salt Itheum: -Fever Soreti,:Broken Breasts:Frost Bites,. Chilblains, Stiogs, llruises, Cuts, Swellings, dtoovheth, -er ripen man or beast. ,It subdues pain arid infiamma- Awn with surprising celerity; and heals burns without a scar. No family sinntld be without tt. ft is always . wanted, and is always ready. We will forfeit a dozen boxesler any single • failure. We believe there was never anything like ;it in the world.. It Is putnp in tin boxes, surrounded by a full circular giving facts, di: rections, testimoulal% , itc., and can be orderedthrough any respectable Druggist throughout the world. Price o'nbr 23 cents. • wgrr k as now4ND, Successors to 3. Id. Pige, 121 Liberty et:, New York, PO: 43, 'CT - . •ti lfeow The Laws or Health. It to useless EitatelVslatures to plug; laws for the 'preservationofthepublic health, if the. gretit Leiv. or selt-preservetioO, ,whichdepeods for its . enforcement oPon the Will Of the hidivirlusl,:ts safferell to remain a de id later. , 1 • . : . `There in scarcely an adult member of the conanntii ty, of either sex, in this country,who hist not seen the. .testimony in favor of BOSTETTIMS STOMACH BIT TERS; farninhed over theecown signatures by persona of achmawledgedmainence in science. literature t Atrt 'commerce, and every department of btudnetut and pro: fessional life. 'These witnesses have declared lit the most'expliclt terms that the - preparation safeggini:- aping epidemics, a sovereign re,medy far dyspepsia; 'a "Taluable anti-bilious 'medicine, 'a.ptnmoter of appetite, Aierital . and harmless stimulant; a - good acclimating . niedichie, a strengthener of the nerves; agenemlinvig. .insat, a protection against 'the -deleterious effects of - Malaria and impure water,. and that, it imparts a degree of v Igor Midictivity Ur the vital forces wbtet .no • .Cinauxondcated by any other of the tonics and stomach; ice 'dime., Under these'elintintstaficei-the preier tattive /aw.nf nature should teaCkevery rational:7*ra* birehnin — of Inherent debillf3•nr eatie: ..quence of expeettle to nusihrilisatun' influences,. is in l otfoeleg the fitiaiiit slrtenipOrtil niariii . ylbilfitipartandenf using , the - Bit rintEl i" deltindyn:i*PAsse:d?l, l gglq‘wt9.W.k....ekAhre - ft a tiral own'knem!es: 7 4.l4 gatrat, teed to Cnralmlliditt* larrini, Mid th4titmini licial and proptietery medlcineemhiclov#l3dford then} the earne.rellef.. • • ' Vase 15; '6T-24-4t Itch - 1'11Mb! Scratch'iso^,Note O.WAYNE:EI IliT ' hENT - • • 0 , . „ , cemegihe Most obettimte Cseeli of Tett.er; Batt Rheum, Waaanteda quiek end ime airs.: i It Itch; ing atones 161=00 1 / 1 6;10) 1 6; . 411 )30 =ed. On, a... fg:ll3l ' li .S4AVIRSOMPEMIENV*Idea t beet Iran 1 4 . WAYNE'S OINTMENT., ;.,, !•13WAYNRIIINTILIOT" ' arm • , - *SWAMPS OUITIOSSTet e ac m R um R im , * 1 ..SW eSSILYNI4IOIIITYREPFI 4 43WAYNC8 1T111410131111016Tn Cafes" itixotiiiiiiti,- tI3W - AIfrESSOMMIO6I67 4 :00 0 -1 4; 815 : 11 - /We 60 centi.2l3ylendlogiliosets toDr.Swayikka: 11,, • • SINIAIed6 - 11 1 6M-Iltre6t, boi6Cirnt? 61riPPIPINt . rittgelkitest4ll6;l4o4: ' l l O V g giregin k tl i nigM Mt": iefittakkki.l mma • latia fat illtellowbl le r • • . milled by examilmton; which we respectful Iy:invite. . • - • - 1. We blyitlielarseet . establishtitentfr the Manu facture ardasie of Clothingin Philadelphia. extend ing throrglOrour 51,9'. :Market street to's.ll' Ifinor street. andoempled sialesively by ourselves. 2. Cur building, having been. constructed by na for," our. own exclusive occupancy. and , for the businessto whirdit is entirely devoted. unites nil the conveniences and appliances which have been found net:emery or de- 8: We Perim-amide mph capital, enabling na to realm ill.pdrehaSes'SS.cashandttiving , n44-Selecticute. at the most favorable prices, from the markets of the entire world.' Is TILLS ytABSIOULAB Wir. BATS ATIYANT.A.- 018 MAUD BY BO Omen tiepin re TAN 2111ATIL . This fact Is well knoWn to the entire trainees community. 4. We sell gads , fc. , r cash , only. which. then it re. striae our badness: tiv ' .those prepated to puretutsolzi that war, ambles us to give them rush advantriges as no house,dolpg a different .business can Possibly .olfer. 5. - 4 balsam expetietiqopt aquarter brit'eeaturf lies informed n 8 fully of tire of the.pubkic andsof the . G. We - employ the.best and most experienced eaters and. Work men in making-up one goods—the style, fit and make' of which are unantpassed: persons whatever, rosy be their physical pecu itarities lentos deformed). pante - be accurately, fitted' tit one Strom oar-'stock. toneteruwalvetter than. by .goads made: to ortitr, and at prices 25 to 53 , kII, OINT. -8 . .-'our-bris' !nii iFfitig,: - Yatttearitlittitiiereising ,- enabling ps to keep the Immo, hest sosortM and most complete stock of Me m Youtheandl3o3 le Clothing to Philadelphia, to which large daily additions are made of fresh goods: rePhmhofttlasesekt— - 9. For reasons already enumerated, we can tad do sell at prices answerers) In att.musas towsmiusts IThr towerr raar.wszis, OA TIMBALE casasu.tikartnarosar 10; An goods when offered_ for sale are 'represented . to be exactly what they are. .• 1 1 . When hererd are, forany reason iissatistled with -lt . purchve made; it reported within treasonable time, :we pledge our Selves, by exchange. refunding of money or otherwise, to give full stt!sfsctkm la every case:Ana ,request that all Isuch May be reportkl Gilts for adjust- Bair WAY BETWBUT. , .. BeC=A etrras,. • - - 318 Id w aselimrsirr. : • AND 600 BIOADNYA,Y: Form- Jane 23, .G 1 - ' 25- •- - • 'WnIPRIKJEURS..:Dr.. LAMONTS4 COISiOLI• will ferCe(Whiektrd 'on the proootheet ! t wo,' or Hair on. Bald Mena i% Wr.v.r known tofail. •• Sample sent for to ete. Addrces REEVES & Co.. 76Nassau St.,- liew link. • . • June 29, 'a -414 y , - . .Deafaiess, allinduessised reallsainrla, treated . with the utmost success, by J. 1134.AC5, M. D..' Oculist 'and Auld, (formerly of Lerdeti, - Holland,)- No. 519- PINE Street.- PHILA.DIMPILLS. ".. Testimonials from the most reliable sources In the . City . and:Country can De seen at his office: - The Medical faculty are Invited to accompany their p.tients. ns be has no seerts in his practice.' ARTWIDIAL 'EYES inserted without pain: charge for examination; - May 4, ST-4:40m I.adiei . . nerzirilea, tinpporters. Elaitie Bandages.: Belts.Stockings. , .Xnee. Caps.' Banning's Flteh's Braces, •.SP i nal, • Should6r and Erector Braces; Light French and German Rapture Truss Mr - Syringes, In great variety, ac.:, at NEEDLES.... on Twelfth St , first door below Race, PHILADELPHIA.. (This. De partment is conducted exclusively for Females and Children, by competent ladies and the stock is adapt ed to their special wank..) I&adjnsting our Mechani cal Remedies we combine correct construction; with ease and comfort 1 . ' ' , Professional adjapter of Tr u sse s. Corner of 12th liedißACE'Streets, 'PEITLADELPIIIA May 4061- ' lE Gm, . . . . . . . . . - A Gentleman who suffered for years from Nervous Debility. Premature Decay. and all the effects Of. youth . fniindiscretion, will for the sake of suffering humani ty, send free to all who need it, the recipe and direc tions for making the simple. remedy by which be man scared. Sufferers wishine to prctit by the advertiser's experience, can do so. by addressing in perfect confi dence, JOHN B. OGDO . , 42 Cedar s'reet, New York: May 18, '6l : - • •. - - -,. '.. - .20-1y -- Oa Womi /,0 . 7.E2161121. Much :sickness, undoubtedly„ , with children and adults, attribtited to other causes; la occasioned by worms.. pLii u,m though effectual in destroying worms, can do no pooni ble injury to the niost dell6ite child: This valuable combinationhas been aucemslully. used by physicians and found to bessfiand sure in eradicating worms, so Children Ihni.ing.warms attention, 'as neglect of the • 'trouble , .often causes pia. onged sickness.. • • • •Mymptoiii of Worms in Children are -oft en overlooked; • Worins in thetfiomach and bowels cause irritation: which can be removed only by theme of a sure remedy. • The combination; of ingredients used in making Brown's "Vermilltae Comfits" Is such as to give the best possible effect with safety. ' CURTIS & 13ROWN, Proprietors, New York... Sold 'l3yrall dealers in medicines, at W. cis, a box. July 211; - • • SO-ly Organized b the :Proprietor, ERRORS 'OF YOUTH. An Effectual Worm' Alediciue. Erowu'it Vertuifuge DR. SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS A. Substitute for Calomel. These Pill are composed of various -roots, having the • power te relax the .secretions of :the Jiver as promptly and effectually as blue pill tit . - mercury,. and: without producing any of:those disagreeable :or dang erous effects which often follOw.•the use of the latter. th'all r billioris disorders these' Pili a may he with confidence; as they promote the discharge of -Vitiated . bile, and remove those obstructions from the ifver and billiary ducts, which is the cause Of billions affections - SORENCIkS MANDRAKE PILLS core . ache, and . all disorders of, ttte •.Liter. indicated by sal low skin, eoated tongue . ; . costiveness, ffronisinetet, 'and . a general :feeling of weariness and lassitude, showing that the liver lain a torpid or obnructed condition. - In short, these Pills may bensed with . advantage In. .all cases when a pnrgtltive or alterative medicine le re :. Please ask for Dr. Schencive. Mandrake .Pills, add observe quit ttai two likenesses of the.. Doctor are on .the Otovernment,i3tamp—one when.th, the last stage of Consumption, add the other in his present health. •Sold 'Druggists 'rind dealers.:. • Price 25 cents per box. ; Principal Office, No. 13 North 6th Street, '•• • ' , General' Wholesale Agents: Demos Barnes - &,Co., • 21 Park Row, - New York ; S. S. Bance,lo3 taltinidra St.; Baltimore; John D: Park, N. E. cor. of Fourth and Walnut St., Cincinnati, Ohio': Walker & Taylor, 13-1 and I3G Wabash Avenue; Chicago, Ill.; Collins :Brothers, southwest corner: of Second and Vine Sta.. St: Louis, Mo. • • • ,Nov• 10, ev4;w. • - . HONS. JOSEPH ZACHEE, FBESICS'TAILOR, P E R & C , Srwe CLOTTIING F.vvthu 'NO; 609 CITZSTNTIT STREW •' • . AMA'S S. Putispn.P#TA. , • . . . Pitt - Samples with prim sent .by mail when 'desired, free of charge, and entire satisfaction grunanieed. • atritnotry:-Why s ei , eiy man elvitild • marry.- Why every woman' sherild marry. - All may marry to know. Read the. IllustratedMarriagraGnideand Med ical Adviser, by Wlt. 'EARL, M. D., 200 liege.. Mailed in sealed envelopu on - recelplbt 21 cents: -Address 12 White Street, New York: June 22-22-3 m - 4digiono Ontellignet. ~T ustur. will be evening limper, wltbont sermon: Until fartherindtice, in Trinity Church, on -Sunday afternoons, ut Il...V.o'clocki.except on the third Slimily la the month, when there will be .service and sermon NOTICES. Viral. Presbyterian Church, corner Ma bantongo and Third Streets. Rev. lima° Burr, Pas tor. Services, Sundry 103¢ A. M. and Th' P. M. Lee 'tare, Thursday evening at TX P. M. Prayer Meeting 9.45 A. M. • Satiday School; 2.P. M.. Pastors residence No. 28 Morris Addition.' - - ' - :3Y - Oecoud Presbyterian Church:- Market 'Square. :Pastor, Rev. Panama de Ircuve. Residence 202 Mahantongo street. Services. 1036 A.-M ; and 8 P. M.• Lecture Thursday evening 8 o'clock. Sabbath School s:luring the' hot weather) 9A. X' Strangers cordially Invited to all the services. : • Ilirivlethodint E. Church. Seemid St., above Market Rev Ps.takrzsr Moose,. D. D.. Pastor. Ser vices Sabbath; at 10, - and 7X, P. Prayer Meeting, Tuesday evening, at 7X and .. .. IsirEuglish Brun. Lutheran Church. Market Square, Bev. 11. GRAVES, Pastor. Services Sabbath morning at 10 o'clock: Evening, Week ly Lecture and Prayer Meeting, Thursday . evenings, 7X o'clock. • - • -. IPVniee Prwier Ineetin, every ' , Sunday morning, from SX.to OM o'clock, in t h e frame Church on Second Street, between Market and Norwegian Sta. All are 'invited. . . ' • . . _ Pr-German Reformed Church, Market-St,. Rev J. C.• Bucurn, Pastor. Regular morning services. alternately; in the-german. and :English-languages, at 10 o.clock.. - Tao German seminal - Occur tit 10; A. ht. ,on_the 21st .of !April; Ihe sth and 6th of • May, mut gd,l6th and 30th of dm.u."- All other services—including each Bab loath evening, at IX °tient, are held In the English language. • • - • ' . . • Prayer Meeting ' and Lecture, each Thntaday . even ing at 7X o'clocit. • •, • " ' - . . MARRIED:. AU Marriage Notiem must be accompanied with .oents to appear in Um Jounnet.. • • • ALLEN—RTTLDRMUTH—Oa the 23d Oflanc L in Potteville,.by the Rev: , 8. R. ' Chubb, Mr. .D.t.vm At.tos to Mies Mier A. Witopsora, botliof Potts ville, Pa. • ' • , BLANK--SCHllliPlf-On the 30th of aue,. in Pottsville, by the Rev. B. S. Chubb, Mr, Greco& ,Brews to Mae gams: - R. Brower, both , of Pottaville, . . . PARNSWORTM—IfILLIZR—on 'the . 4th • of • 3 . 1113 c : 18137, by the:Rev. U.'Graves, Mr. Tenon B. Fauna:vont% of Danville, ,Pa., to 1111.1.8 hialisat bittisa, of:Potts :vile, pa. . • -• • • • . _ . • •._ RB—RRED—On the 4th of July, ISST, by Rev. U. Gowns. Mr: CIIAILLis.B Kula, to Miss TILDA Raw; both of Pottsville; Pa.. -7 ' MIILLBNARILL---;-0O Tuesday. July Id. • 186 T, by the Rev. Father Brabancy, Josara Illutt.sn of Palo :Alto tO Eusr: CAnn.t. of New Castle. , - Ashland and Mahanoy papers please copy. , • ULItICH—LBO:— . On the dtit Inst.,. tilt . the Itay. Jos. RticCool,lit;lrt.t.woon truncir to Mils 11.7c, • dtuakhter of Wlllituniebo, Irsq.,of Tamaqua.. ' • • DIED. Simple annoaneements of. deatk4 free. Those a c einapaided teith esogiees, &e., must be paid for at the rate of. 10 cents per line.:. . . . BATTED:YR:BR—On the 2901 .1 or Jana.- in 'West Brunswick, Gigolos BalTzleuFie, aged 81,years. . . , DzSILVA=In Ashland; June . O. KisSail , . 6126 ter of Milligram/ Susannah Hindson, .#ge otLicau l s Defillvt4 aged 27 years and Y mos. " - • - SUE=On•the 29th of June, in Orselgeburg, Jowl' A. Ear.. aged 48. yearn and 2. monthe:'. . . . . ELLL2 , —At ,Slienandosh -City, on. Tueeday; une 11., 1887., Idasv, only.danghter of :Andel. and. Ms J g./pa, aged ayttats, 2 montbs and days.. . • . , RLTTBII.--61 Jaiy Oth, 1.887. of scarlet fever, pass. Itrrrst;'only - sonafl3aranel and aadSopllin E Ritter; aged 2 years, 8 months salt days: . • Funend.takesPlace., - - lkinds2,, ,, (to-incirrow), at three o'clock. Alleatoyvn and Easton german papers please .; EXlELLY—OnTatiday, 2ua hitt , , Mrs.Virsoit at the reeidelice otter daaghter. 31r9-31.1311- 137 a cen . tre Stieet;Aged 93 years. ir ,.. D ...a i t ' ot. - . - L. sad Orosmemtak Had Adams: mackw.te . "sties, alanruu4 r Table sad Wardussad Work 'aerated; to dui kart 47iti of tirt. warriiii edtoittre.-eatastitetiott.,,- m=a.. ALEX.ANDERI NIOURIS;. KEY - 000 YkTerg WORKS ethikin fiticilaboAst4iiimakrk.; ..X.EginCESlTlraar y • P2XXSYLVANIL, 7 *. l. **4 l P l4 # 6 .ii. l ** *Out 'AWN. &Oil*. W"MrMMiir - t4IOM . vt 4.l l2s==. Aat i tlOMMoXtgrik-ampla.4, •" 1 ' iceswis nu& us 11.13 WO It IC n ' 1E .strablishad in 1E153. • Mrs:, Reese vrOuld reSpettfnlly annr,nrce tbo 110 that abe.vvill continuo the Marble Works, at the stand,. corner. Callowbill.and f3ccond ti . . n.-ets, ti,. cc Market.) Pottsville. - - Constantly on band all kinds of . . . Also Family Vaults made to order.. - Wad: of- every deeerlptioniumnpUy execut e d - In the -best style, sill warranted to ere aatlsfaellon, Mine stud.„-desigue forniehed at-the ehortbd notlee. "ad-33- ' • I.tR.S:‘ LEWIS RICS.4EIt. LEGAI...MYPIC: :A DIUINISTHATION NOTIEE.--Letter LS. of .Adminlatnition to the egate of Edward lit .Bland,..decetuted, late a the Borough of Pottsville, having been granted to the understgned,—l'vo4l a having claimsagalnat said estate will please present, them and all indebted are requeete.i to make pay - meta. I). W. BLAND, L. C. BLAND. -Adroluistratera. Potinine, Jane ‘2•--47-6;..1 . , AA UDIMOR , S: NOrifll.C.- In the. Court of Comtnon Pleas of Schuylkill - County, the' under signed having beetrappinted by the Coact of Common Pleas°of said Cimnty,- as Auditor to dhtritalte tL e -moneys in - Court arising - from the Sberiiis sale *of - the property of the Mine Mill - Coal Company to tu.d - ,smong.those entitled by law receive the same, w attend to the duties of his appointment Pt his c nice In Centre street„-in the Borough of - Pottsville, •on tinter day, the 20th day • of July. A. D. Lief, between the hours of 10 A, M. add S P. M. of said day, when 101 persorus interested irtaaid fund are hereby. requested attend,• r, -Auditor. Ally 5,100 f. •-•-• 21-2 t . . ritATioN.NOTICE.—Noti , :, A hereby given that letters of administration on estate of James Robertson. late of the Borough of :sb . . nersvdle:. deceased. h, panted to Thomas Robertson. All pert.ons thco.to,-. having claims or demands 'against the estate of the decedent, are•renuested. td..intdte the sam knox o the 'sold Thomas Itobertami without e delay. ' . •.• THOMAS ROBERTSO.I%. Adrolial-trutnr, June 8, '6•l 23 Gt.' New Castle street, Mit ersvill... T IRTTERSii of aduiinistration 'to the &tale . e 'Ca Hoary W.lleirman, deceased, having teen ed to the tindersigneo - :—Al , pergona having claims i!i filease'preeent them and all . indebted will mak. t:.tl - went. • . MART 110E-FMA: , .7, Adminietintrix, ermona,-'.flay 30t.h, , • 22 61! . . . VISTATIR OF roury 12.4 enaed.—Whereas, Letters of A dminietrathm. the estate of John Emrich, late, of • North Nent.eiti Township, lathe Conetyrof Schuylkill decimeml, ha t• been granted. to the .enhecriber,—All.pereona claims against said estate • are requested ta'pre.l:t them and those:lndebted to - sald otattl to make itne,•• diate pal inent to FRANCIS .1331RICIL'Admirm: . North Manhehlt, May ES, SST • a* 10 STATE Blir FIRANIC. PUTT, Dred • LL Letters of administration upon the estate of Frtot:, Pott, late, of the linrongh of Pottetille, C• , deceased, having been duly granted hy the Register 'Ll said County of Schuylkill, to David P Brown. .1:0 r e. sides in the said Borough of Pottsville—those latietned to the said estate are requested to make plymem, and all persona having claims or 'demands 'against the ',lid estate, are requested to make known the same .witivott • delay, to the nncierslkned. . . Davin. P, BROWN, Administrator, Miy-24, , C7 22-6 t •.• P. 0., Polt:,011e, CANDIDATES. lad i torsi 1111 incr. Jnu rn 1---GENTs • =Permit us; lrf •View ca the approachlw.• nthettugof the.Republlcur Convention for the nonn. nation of County, OtlicerS. tn./.1302;e8t, the . name ot Gr.N. GitOltGg C. .WYNKOOP as a cindidate ft.r tf,.. Sheriff:ate. Ills record-as a loyal soldier and cittr,o, is so well.knoWn to tub people of.the County. and ss he in every wny qualified. , for. the position; we feel lth would be ode of the strongest men that could be nolo. inatgd, ' • MALI ANOY AND. June `.M, . : • • GENERAI, . NOTICES:. NOTICE is hereby given to all whom it may .cimeern not to' inter:ere with the IlorKe. Carriages and liarmess and One Sleigh, now in peasersion of liawara ilfelser, AP they belong. to me. . July 6, .67-27-3 t JAS. KIRKPATRICK. _ _ eirtteen Tribe. 'No.' 41, T. 0. of R. .ra...-At. an election he'd ilth Sun, Bop Moon 14. S. D. 3Td, thelollowlng Chien were elected : S., Chaa,: - D.• Boyer ; S $ , Gen.-C. - Lee S Greenwood; P., Jan. Brown ;.C. of R., 3. C Bon , 8.. of W...Ge0,-Ittelgail; Representative to G. U. oil Geo. McNeil.. • • ' , • 27-I.t • NOTlCE.—Waiter Green. agent for ,To!,(1 Smith, le notifi2d to call and rrdeeva it, pictures now in my poesession ‘ for Ivoard: or they w-I I be sold. - • ' 14ATII.A.N HERB, - -.- Proprietor Exchange Hotel,. htinereville. . • July 6. , 6I :• • . - . • ..!7••: 7 i • NOTICE TO 24C11001. examinat ion of School Teach, 7.t will be held by the County Superintendent, in the tee t, of Donaldson, (Fralley School District) on tic lis d.v of July, ISa7,. at which lithe the :schools •of Pratte', School District will be - given out in three tna'e and t ferriale teachers. Tenn; S' months. BENDY S. STONG, Seca-tam Donaldson; Janc,2slh, 16c . f. . • C ItD...The: undersigned. tiering • ated -themselves under the title or DIN & HOVEY. eesire to intorm the pith 6 . that they halts opened a Printing OMee in Nisbet' o City, where they are prepared to do all ktnitn of till and ornamental Job pritaing in the 1 -, 4 manner. - CHAS. DII.NKELBERGEIt. • (t.st4 of the firm of Wm. Ramsey & C..) MI. A.. HOVE Y, • ' • (Late Superintendent New nogon Coal Co Jane 29th, • ' '-'6:a 119141111116UG11 - 1. 1 1 T 1F: - .-Nnt If t• ti 11( 41.1efeby given_to the inhabitants. that P r•-• dinances relating tonnisances, and-throwing of to.f., and filth into, the gutters and styeams.of strictlyenfpreed vabd all persons are hereby warm not to allow any offensive or putrid stilisue cep to t,.- main on their premises. and -that the gutter., ei lin N yards and privy wells to be kept cleafi at all times. en -as tot to he InjarionSto the health of, and offensive to the public.. . • • The ordinance relating to the .muzzling of dogs be strictly enforced. • All persona violating the ordinances -feistier , to - the matters above mentioned. will alter five days from ma, date, be prosecuted . according to law, without blither . notice. 31r. B. BELL, Chief Bur;;,,-e. Potisxllle, DISSOI,UTIFON.—Ttie Co-Partnership heretofore f : xL.ting between the untlersiew.;l. under the firm name of WM. RAM%Y h..re bjr dissolved by mutual consent. The business mill he continued bp. WILL4III. RAMSEY; who is fully au thorized to collect and receipt fur all monies due te, an&liquidate all obligation.. Incurred by flie late duo. • . WILLUM ItAMbEY, CEIAhLFI3 DUNKELBERfiEIt. Jime 15. 15C7..: • AWING prirchased• the 'undivided onoirhi "in. [crest, good will, kr., of Mr. Chas. - Dunkelherger the "Mattartoy •Clazetteii establishment — we desire to inform our friend.; and the public „generaily, thtt sce shall carry on the business as . heretofore, and will en deavor tp make the "Clitzetta" an institution worthy of onr city, arid deserving their good wishes and eontin ued patronage. • ' • WILL-JAM RhMSEY. Jnoe 22,1867 TUE PNEVIOATIC OR REM MIMEO PROCEI , O4. . . e' •' TO MANUFACTURERS OF IRON AND STEEL : The Proprietors and Assigneei of the several Letters .Patent granted by the United States to Henry mer and Robert 'Mullet _ . :of Pretend, • and to W illiam 'Kelly of this country, for certain Improvements in the Manufacture.of Iron and Steer, -hirving, - . for 'the ore of-avoiding all contlictof datum thereunder, -con solidated their intermte-in sail patents -finder a trus- . • teeship, .stylett 'The _Trustees - of. the Pneumatic or. Bessemer Process of Making Iron and Steel," the un dersigned, the Trustees aforesaid, invite - attention to the advantages of the above process, which can be fully and freely examined' •at the werks of Messrs. Winslow t Griswold, at. Troy- N. Y. The great STRENGTH,- - TOUGIINE.%+, 'Perfect 'HOMOGENEITY and comparative CII.E.AP.NESS OP - PRODUCTION, of the Peenmatie or it ere rmer Csist Steel, well as the enormona extent of Its manufacture and Imo abroad, • are .too well knosin to require comment ; 'and the undersigned are pleased td state that Works have been, and others are •now being erected in differeat sections of the country to supply, in pert, the demand so-rapidly-increasing here ion +STEEL RAILS, :AXLES,' TMES:' BOILER PLATES, ROFtGINGS, &c., Arc.; made. by.their process. • Licenses will now be 'issued on reasonable terms to all who desire to engage in the new manufacture, and ' the undersigned hereby give notice that they have ap- , Pllzi Z.S.' DiTRFER,. of 418 Walnut St., Philadelphia, theirVeskeiol Agent, . . , for the management of this department of their huii netts, and, that all communlcalions ref pecti Licei*es, and inquiries contenting the Process and coot of the a h aar ag at a n t lth ve erefor, ' 'should be addressed to JOHN F. WINSLOW, Troy, N. Y: JOHN A. GRISWOLD, , t - Trustees. DANL. J. MORRELL, Johnstown, Pa. ' January 5, 'GT . TO THE EITIZEIVO s of titchorl kitVlLlouitty.—Tke lalvs of year . Cciuntv prohibit tobacco and cigar dealers In other parts of yOur btate, from selling . to dealers and others residing in youiConnty, unless a license is taken out costing $3OO. We will sell.to citizens. miners and dealers,_tobaeco r segars and pipes (gent by express) at from 25 to 100 per cent; less than you can -hey of your merchants, who have had this law passed kir their own benefit, so that they . may ralethe'prioes. Make up clabe and remit as $lO or upwards, and ilr• .der from us, and you cab save nearly one-half of your money, and get better articles of - tobacco and cigar, than you can buy in yenr:Citunty. We guarantee ea , - isfacton.- Bend for our price list, so that you may our prices, and order by clubs: We will semi r ilet 'goods by express. Address all orders to . M. B. DEAN, No. 413 Chestnid street, May 19,3 m . ' Philadelphia. .. . . TINE NEW YORK do 11 scuirgi.- KILL . COAL CO., have for pale, two or Carriages,.threer tone a two-horse Carriage), 12 horac.i and 20 mules. .. . . .. 2312 - For further particulara,,,apOyto the office of the. Company. at ' ' WOODSIDE, Feb 2, 'BT-15- . Selmylklll. County, Va. l'ATANTED.: ? trwelve Female and -three 31 b, VV Teachera tor the public echoole •of the Boren of Askland. Also one . Superintendent. School t ‘t c.l 9 months. Examination. to he held In the. Brirk School /louse, July ISth; at 9 o'clock precleely. By order of the Board of Directors. July' 6, .61-27-2 t - - JAS. LAKE, Fedi'. .91.Acirears WANT D.. The School Bor ^ ' of Shenandoah City' wlsh to employ One Mal e Teacher. as Superintendent. and Two Female Teacher.. Illuunkuttlon to ha herd July lath, 19GT, at 9 o'clock. .A M.; at the actootpuildific For fat ther pint;culare to plt to - 1'; 3, FERGITSON,'SeatI. - artier of the Board. July 6, '6T.-2t. WANTS D...ThaSchool Board of Ikarich Too n ship Wish to employ 4 Male end 2 Female Tout: ere.vi. °nem:late teacher to be the principal. of No • 1 Schol for the School Term commng Ant. tty Se o ptemher, - to be kept - open for e ni cin ne months. 2llotu An - examination of appllants will be held by the Cone! y Superintendent In thearlcir School House In in, July 19th, 1867, to commence at 10 o.cloch, A. Waxy fo be mdd to ttus principal of No.lSchool. per mohtholnd,the other male teachers p ew month Female teachers $3O per month: i_fty or of the Board. , , .' • _ J. H. !HELD. Secretary. • NVAPITXD.,"Brati EngitsbMatd - 15 yeah. cc Oriente in the mines, a situation as Inside b 0.,. ?federate wages iviltbe - taken and aati.faction frtly . anteed. Please address - FREDERICK-EtUTLEII, Joy . .. 'Mahar:toy City. St ve Vot naII:CALCIARS WANTED...An - examinati , o of Teat:rem . will be held on Friday, July rib, 1867; in the Publicethool 'Building to the Bonnie, of "rremontrcommencleg at 8X o'clock. fnr three Male . and three Female Teachers- By order MI:tool. GEO.B k OWEN. Seely Triniont, June 26 .t WANTED . dtwo Blacksmiths.. two Carpeutcr and ten Laborers • at. - Honey Brook Coal WealMdadenried,,Carban County. • Single men Draferred.; _ .y- • H. HOPKINS , Sur' :-LOST AND FOUND tTRAM9MII).—Bzom. the preadeea of theantecriter In 'Norwegian Toyrnahtp. - a SMALL Is dis i ctunt - itur.x, and sp.BED HORSE. one ey blind. Five dollars reward will be Pahl for their return, or any latormaticat whltit!=" willJaad to their recovery.-- • - • • • June st-rt.., „JOHN crsoßds SERLEIL STRAM I C.W.--Came to the premist dot Th,,m• gurl l / 4 1.,10p0r; . --litabarpy-; - The 1..4. ownPriitt , c9Put forward. Prove . zrY- 1 :S- 1 toopertYi.paY =Pomba. and take tier away, /0 , ..1 or abo wui humid a ...'aistdrog to law. " e . Mattanoy Plano. Jonittlileal" - . ta.at BS= :14411111111T*--ABllkThabrelbkwois left In- the Philadei• „ The rne2 r AW=lT S V -1 4 1 41 4 , 411% . e vi r i aetilf - Iti m* -11; Morrell Store will " • 444 99-4 W. , 0011"tiniC, MEMM WANTED. `4 ~.., M .r. , r .. too P'l.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers