V,... •••• - Ajiiitt0 . .....A04.rt41 . ! POTTSVILLE; .PA. mAT UEDA V. ArII I. i 3,1667. UNION STATE TICITFIT FOR SUPREME JUDGE. Eton. RENO' w.wmu4ss AI Pittsburgh. FOR A CONVENTION TO AMEND THE STATE CONStur u TION We raiee the above Bannei,_anaitntend fighting it c,nt' on this line. We yr opoae in the Conatitotkin,-Increavingthe.nnm her ft ItepreFentatives 10 400. and senatora 100, limit I:12 the semLbm to 40daya with pay at $6 a day. The ltep,cerctatt'ce to be elected from tingle dlatrictit tprottcloat the State. PREP a ecnetal law fai. all . corponatione -beyond the n , t, o f itnh ertt !ph e- and no arecial laws. corprratiuns with an income not ticeolngs2s;. (.41, to be cisaltcAliy the ronrtn. , For the balance of the business of the Bfrte,.4o. smi th ' me t, sOesss, vrc.nld be sufficient foi all the legisla -11141 the people require. This is the only plan to break tp the TA( Ftlq. cot ropt systim, because large bodies in shoat sessiors are not PO liable to be Compted.. TO EITE.CIII.BERS_BiIIa for subscription to. the Journal are transmitted this week bs a num ber of. euhscribers. We trust that our patrons Will as in former Tears, promptly. 'remit. the amounts. Although small in indtvidnaleasee, yet in the aggregate these bill make s. conaiderable, amonnt,"ard are very important to enable tte . to liquidate liabilities whieb.we daily contract in the publication of the Journal. We shall feel obliged to all our subscribers to whom bills are sent; if they will immediately .cnniray with our. request. A REPT:MI-WAN STATI: ,C-OvVENTION will be held in Riehmnna, nn the.let proxlmo. Tun gold five franc piece, and its multiples, have been fired upon its the basis of a uni form international currency by the Congress now sitting!, in Bark. - - • DELPII COUNCIL' iB preparing to impeach Wm. J. Ovens, the assessor, who is charged with_ murdering the gallant young Culonel Win. Riddle C. H. H." has a capital European letter in tbeJournal to day. -We congratulate our talented friend upon the great pleasure with which thousands each week read his well written and most interesting letters. They are tlinuelit by many to be among the best which have appeared this year in American journals. We think they are, decidedly.' •Tric friends of the freedom Of Ireland are In ecstasies at the statement that Itussia in vi•es a joint inquiry on the part of Russia, France, the United States and England, into the c audition of Ireland. Should this prove to be the nese, a misunderstanding between Russ'a and . England can hardly , be avoided, and hope for Irellnd may spring out of .this. Qcr.nv:—Tbis week we• received from the Secretary of the Reading Railroad Company, a note, ordering the' publication in the Jour nal of the time-table of the Company, to be discontinued. As this is somewhat an unu sual event, we are prompted to Inquire the reason why, in order to avoid arriving at a conclusion as to the motive, the reverse of creditable to the Company. Will We be fa vored with the reason ? Trre late Mexican war cost. France $O,- 000.000 and many yalnabie lives, ,while she haaprobably. lost forever all chance of ever recovering. for French capitalists and subjects the old and heavy debts of Mexico, that were to be made secure by the intetvention and the war_ war like that just terminated will probably be considered by tho Liberals as canceling all those old • debts, at least so far as the subjects oT France are concerned as creditors. THE arenment that the Rebel States no longer need military government has had many refutations, to which are added the mur derous attack upon a peateable . procession of colored men at Franklin, Tennessee,' and the disclosure of the condition of Texas, in the Republican Convention of that:State. The delegates from many counties report tbat)na tice is a farce, and that the lives of -Union men are in perpetual danger. The son of Mr. Ritchie, one of the delegates, was recently murdered for no other reason than that he had served in the Union Army, and his mur derer lives,in safety. That Governor Throck: morton refused to interfere in this case con firms the necessity of the policy Gen. Sheri dan his adopted in Texas: •. THE Navy Department_ in Washington has received a letter from Commander F. A. Roe of the U. S. steamship Tacohy, Informing the Department that, in compliance with a re quest from the commander of the Austrian man-of-war Elizabeth, he addressed a letter to President Juarez, asking him to give up the'body of Maximilian. It appears that the Mexican Government has refused the request; and that the Austrian 'Government, will im mediately dispatch a fleet to demand the body. All the European Governments show themmost intense excitement, and it can hard ly be doubted that but for the United States is new and' formidabl9 combination of Euro-. pean Powers against4he Republican Govern. meat of Mexico. would be tormed. . WITT RE BLEW MS BRAINS Our:—Our read_ era will remember-that Congressman Hise of Kentucky. a copper rebel, committed suicide shortly after his election. It appears that he did so to avoid conviction of perjury.:under an indictment which would have been brought :against him, in the District Court. In his ,campaign speeches he denounced the law ex empting Government bonds from taxatioa as oppressive to the poor, and stated that he bad held $36,000 in Government bonds.in his safe for a number of years without cost to him; It was subsequently ascertained. that he had not accounted for the interest received on them in his income returns, and had sworn, a'n making those returns, that he had no tax able income. Accordingly steps were taken to indict him for perjury, and he blew his brains out. IN speaking of the effect of the . bountiful ,harvest this year, the Pittsburgh Gazette says that it will probably- benefit Massachusetts 'and Pennsylvania more than Illinois=the .manufacturer, the mechanic and laborer more than the farmer. But . when prices recede through abundance, - the cost of carrying from 'west to east does not recede in a correspond ing ratio, if at all ; the, consequence will be that the farmer of Illinois may have to be content with one half the price for the wheat or flour he produces, which his factor gets in New York or Boston. A few such harvests as this will teach the farmers of the prairie States that- their true and only policy is to have the consumers of.tbeir surplus produce near to-them. In plaln'English, they. will be come converts to the policy of protecting the manufacturing interests of the country, so that .industries of every 'kind shall spring up amongst them in all parts of the land. There is too much- carrying . dune in the United S Cates. As the manufacture of Steel is attracting "deserved attention here, and as we years since spoke of the precedence which the steel must _ inevitably take over the iron rail, we ask attention to the fAlowing which we ex tract from the London .Mining. Journal of June 22d,•1867: STBEL‘ VeIISCS hot Mart/I.—The advantage, .in an economical point ot .view the steel over the iron rail Is fast being made manifest, and the total dts appearance of the latter appears to be a mere question of time. Whilst there are complaints from almost every iron.dl.triet I t the kingdoin that very few orders formils are being sent in; yet the makers of [bore of steel, par ticularly Bessemer, were. scarcely ever busier. On nearly all large railways, and especially on three Where the traffic is heavy, the steel rails are admitted to effect a'very great saving, and are being fast put down on some of the largest lines. Amongst others, the Lon don and North-Western have recently-put some down,. and other companies are. doing the same. At ono es-. tablishment alone, the Smell Yorkshire' Works, at. Penlstone, the, Ann known as that. of Cammell & Co., (limited). about three hundred tons of Bessemer'rails are being turned out. There are some very large Orders in hand for the Great Indian Peninsular Railway, which tuastiow about 800 - miles open. whilst the entire length of the line will be upwards of 1300 miles. For Amer ica, also, a large quantity is being made.- as it Is under stood that the Grand Trunk of Canada line is to be laid with steel rails, which Mr. Watkin, M. P., (the chair man of the company) asserts will effect a very great saving, seeing that they have 50me.1977 miles in work. Russia is now about our beat customer for iron rails, tor. which country they mad be suitable, seeing that the lines are long and the traffic limiter& One very great bar to the general Introduction of the Bessemer call le the rather large royalty to the patentee by the makers, whits. in Pr 410 , 11, where a very large quantity of Besse mer is being turned Out, no royalty whatever is paid, Intent rights not being recognized in that:country. Tne advantage rhea gained is such as to:chetk expor tations tothe North of Europe. CoNattEssloNAL —hfr. Trumbull's recon• struction bill passed the Senate on Thursday, yeas 32, nays C. This Act declares the mill tary.authonty in the late rebellions States to be higher than the civil, and provides for the removal of any'civil or military officer by the Diszrict Commander, providing the General of the United States Armies shall approve of, the action, and, further makes provision for the filling vacancies so occasioned. It further guards registration so that unworthy persons cannot be registered, and provides that no permit' shall be disqualified, as member of a registratfon board, on account of color. In the House the Senate was referred to the Reconstruction Committee, and a res olution 'adopted providing for an adjournment until the 13th of. November.' It Is thought • that the Senate will concur In thlai. and that there will be no definite action on Impeach• 'wens until that tee, - IIECONSTRUCTION'. Spegch of the - f4tat -foollooner. .. . . • 'Da Tuesday lEist the - bill of .Tiiddeni Ste. .•. • - yens for amore efficient government of the rebel Stittds, -passecLthei House by a" . strict party.vote,, yeas 118; 'Asia 31. . Beforelts . 'passsgeLha veteran statesman, made. the fol lowing Speech which shows that the vigor 'Of • his intellect is as great ail ever,- and. that - fire of Patriotism barns brightly' inn - the old' man's (as ilie freednien of the South- love to call hini)hreasti. : •-• • ' • . Me.&rarest; Of Pennsylvanba eloaed the debate, say ing: I confetti-laud. a small portion of the blame for the arts of the President, illuce_ccingrem adjOurned, may - be nliected to Qingreas, in using improper language In the bill, and that was owing.to Prt iniiistinct knowledge • of the country-which we were ,legtelating for. If we had all agreed. as we have since agreed. tbat the fitateii lately In rebellion were conquered territory; and if we had treated them aecordlogly. we stionld bare had but . very little trouble in reconstructing • thin Government upon tire principles of the admission of .new States, .* but wevere net alfperfectly prepared for It In our un derstanding of the laws of nmione, nor is it wonderful that we should have been thmswarideringin our vletniCi . I will state What I suppose to -bare - .been' our real.. condition. The nation wee afflicted with a dvil war. which for a . time 'MIA 'nu Insurrection. which divided - its away.. Some twetril ta.Ullotus of inbabitails; claim ing that they no longer belonged to this Union, set' p - art independent governmerit. They formillall the ma-. cbinery of a governmenti both of .a national govern meat and of a State larder • that ..tiational :government,. 'and they' raised. large sunk* to defend , their preten sions. We. at the period when'we ileclared a blockade, ad -mit:ad them-to be not an independent nation, but an. in . dep-mdent belliger ntrimingabove insurrection, and entitled to all the privileges. and !abject.' to all.the Ha , %Sties of an independent belligerent.. Ths,nations of Europe so treated them. We- so treatecil*.thent. In short. there can be no &Min: of the , fact: We were then at war as two independent nations It depended on the conqueror whether be would treat the one .that was vanquished after the war.aa a vanquished -nation, or whether he should punish him for violation of the so-essiga rights of the nation in addition, and_ we con 'a net did we conquer? • We;conquered the Cofifeder-, ate Goveriunent : we conquered all the Statesi forming the COntederate Government: we conquered a govern ment which by its own deciarationk owed no allsgi- Imre to the . Government: of the United States. That they should pretend after that that they had one right underthe Constitution which- they had thus repudiated and attempted to.. destroy: and that; they were still States-within the Union as asserted- by the - gentieman from Wisseinsio I Kr. Eldildm, looks- to me like a bold absurdity. Yet that was the doctrine of the Preste. dent -that fe the doctrine which gentlemen are fight ing about. We declared themto be conquered provin cat we were treatingthem tinder military law. - Now. what is the law In reference to under. conquered from a foreign Independent belligerent ? • . • When you conquer from a foreign nation or from an independent belligerent. the territory that is conque-ed is governed by military. power—by the conimander-in. chief of the army (who.in this case was .the President), until . the legislative power of the nation shall have.spo ken and directed what laws shall govern 1 but the mo ment that the legislative power of the nation interpo ees the military authorities tense to exist and the arm. mender-in-chief of the army has .no -more. to say to It than a corporal in the ranks has to say Jost what that legislative power orders hint to say,.'. Ile ha-eta doing • what that legislative power orders him to do, and he can do nothing else. ' . . A great deal is said . ahent the 'President aCting . as commander-in-chief of the-army Until he was snperee ded In bis authority by Congress. I haie no fault to find with his maintaining military rule, but he assurried to exercise legislative-, powers be Roomed to estals. lisligoieniments-; he assumed to appoint civil officers : he assumed that that conquered -.territory should re-• ceive back precisely the Constitution of the loyal States, and be entitled to all the privileges they ever had. No put of that came within the'-power of the commander-in:chief of the army. - It Congress sends an army to quell the Indian war in Nebraska, Congress orders them to go there. What do the officers do ? They pass no act of legislation. They go there and order these. troops when to charge and' when to retreat.' They-Art:l them: they - put them through all the military exercises. They can do no act - Which looks like regulating the object-of the war or the ("eject of the army. The Conatitntion takes expreas're-' servation to show that there can be no such power It expressly declares that .Congreas - shall have power to make all' rules and r• gulations'for tho govSrnment of the land and naval forces of. the United States. The Executive has nothing to do with it The Judielary has nothing to do with it. Congress is the only pow er I Congress has enacted rules and utiles of war.-. Can the President of the -United States interfere with -them ? , Can he add new articles, new rules, new teen • lotions? No such thing. -The military' officers that, were sent a. commanders In these States -were simply appointed as agents at Congress. - To - be sure,-originally the bill provided a military scipervistonalmnly, and we had. intended to follow 'it np with a law patting reconstruction into the hands of This is-what I should have done, and whst I bad been prepared fur 3 but if we choose to adopt offi cers of the army—if Congress cbcotles- to.take them from the arms , and, to assign them to-that duty, they then .become agents of Congress, and neither the Presi dent nor any person under him has the tight to inter, Jere or do anything bet execily what Congreas has said. 'lt can be reduced. I think- to a. plain proposi tion : ' That Congress and Congress alone, was the only power that can reconstruct=was the only power that can adroit these ontlylng.Statea. • .. • I deny that the President had any right to call upon the' Attorney General. or upon any other branch of the 'Government, to interfere 'with any act of such recon struction, 'There was hut one appeal; and that was to the agents appointed by Congress, or to Congress. It 'ought to be 'known before this to the President. I trust it is knOwn-in every colored school in this Dis trict that the Constitution of the United States does not apply to any Territory: The. States are parties to the Constitntion.. They. are the .contracting powers._ They are the substantive body. Territory, however, acquired by purchase or _Con quest, or by inheritance. Is the properyy only of that substantive power, and . that'power bound up by the Constitution, that power alone is governed by the Con: stitntion, but does not extend for any purpose into any Territory of acquired province. :Why; then. talk about the Constitution regulating the action of Congress ins. province—in a Territory, or in a 'conquered State, whether . Conquered from a legitimate State or' an ills gitimstri State ? I may be asked how.one wonld treat 'the Confederate States of America. Just as Congress chooses.• They are oar property—their citizens are .our subjects. Their lives and their liberties are sn'hject to the supreme will' of this body, always controlled ny the laws of - nations, the laws of war, and the -laws of . There is no other power on•earth, there is no.branch of the Governthent, there is no power in •the Govern ment, except what I have mentioned, that has : any right to interfere or to say "ne word on the ant ject: If you wish to pm.ish the malefactors for violated majesty, that is another matter. Possibly you might •do• so .through your courts of justice: at least you might at tempt it, but I don't suppose you can do it.. But there is one thing:clear. That territory not' being Yet de clared by Congress to beta a state of peace or resto ration, it is, under the -military authority of the GOP ernmenG arid any tribunal constituted by the militai4 authority, any military tribunal, any court-martial, can try any one of those who belongedto the belligerent forces. . . . • , • Jefferson Davis, - or fury man of the army of the Con federacy, conquered- by ns, is - .•this day Subject to.trial by military tribunal. If I bad me way I. Would long. ago have organized a military tribunal, under military power, and I would, have pat Jefferson Davis and all the members of his Cabinet - on: trial for the minders at. Anderamville, the murders at Sallibury, and theshoot lug down of prisoners of war in cold blood. • Every man of-them is responsible for, these crimes.- It was a mockery to try that wicked fellow, Wirz; and brake him responsible for acts which the Confederate Cabinet was •guilty . of. Of course, they should be: condemned. Whether they should be executed aftr swards I give no opinion. I would carry out h punishment as, is my, Judgment, the justice of the country required I would. carry it out through the legal tribunal I nave mentioned. - and which are as much the legal tribunal of theland as the Supreme Court of the United States. This Is my view exactly of- what would be logical.- As to. the question of confiscation, I think that a man who has' murdered a thousand men. who has robbed a thousand widows and orphans, who has burned down - a thousand harms, escapes well if. Owning a hundred - thousand dollars, he is fined fifty.thousoual dolisis as a punish ment and to repair his ravages.. I said before that I was not in favor of earaininary punishment.. I truet,• in saying that, that 'need not be supposed to condemn them"when they are necessary.- For instance, the clamor that has been raised' against the Mexicali Gov ernment for the heroic execution of murderers and pi rates—fsome applause and clapping of hands.. followed by some hisser] —that-clamor finds no favor with me.' I think that while - he has gone far 'enough, though not hail as far. as he might be justified in going; yet there. is no law nor policy•under heaven, and. no settee' of justice that will condemn that really heroic, mach ert• during man—who, for six years, bas been boated with a reward non his head ; has. been been driven . from% ,one end of his empire - to another. 'until he got to the very border; who has no parallel in history that I know of except it be Williain of Orange, who was driven from island to island, and from sand-patch to sand patch, by just about as blcody a persecutor as Was to be found to Maximilian—when he decreed •that eve;y man warring against him should be shot down without further trial. • •• . . . I - am not going to Shrink from saying that I think euch punishment proper.. I do not say nor do I ask that anybody. should be executed 'ln this country. There' has got to be :a sickly humanity here which: I: dire rut:gct along aide of, for fear I might catch it. [Laughter.) And it it now to be held' by one of the moat liberal and enlightened gentlemen In the country mean Gerritt Smith) that we should eveWprty a pop, tion or the damages inflicted on, the rebels and pay' a portion of the re , iel- debt. [Laughter.) retail come some day to have an orpiment with Horace Greeley about.that, and therefore I need not say anything further. I believe I. have wild enough to explain my Views on the subJect. and noW I , ask fora vote. [comatuNicATED BOILER .EXPLOSIONS Many causes of boiler explosions hive been given to the public and yet the subject is not ex hausted. . Many explosions do -occur from the carelessness_ of incompetent engineers, and very many from the manner of the construction of the boiler, the arrangement of valves and steam. connections. The manner of testing &holler by hydraulic pressure of . 80 per cent. higher than the steam pressure is absurd, as after having been put to this test, some weak spot may have . be en strained, and left to be finished by a steain pres sure, possibly of not more than forty pounds.— How often do we find upon examination of boil ers after explosions, part or parts of the iron of a boiler of a weaker appearance that it the point of explOsion ; and how often do we find all parts' of the boiler in a good condition, with the appear ance of having had plenty of water.. When snch explosiona do occur, the result of 'the eiplo sion must be from Borne cause,: other thin &high pressure of steam. And what. May be treated by some scientific men as ribanrd, leaves ns to consider if these explosions do not occur from an accumulation of gas, under the space of-the boil ers. Some few days ago a -locomotive of the P. & R. Co., at Palo Alto, exploded standing idle, and . upon examination it was fond -that plenty of water was in the boiler,: and only, a pressure of steam of fifty' pounds. - .This engine had been coaled np full and the dampers closed up, and then suddenly opened by the fireman, and the result was an explosion, separatieg the fire-box from . the boiler and lifting the engine-rip from below. Most explosions are confined to dyl-' ruder boilers, and much can be said in regard to their construction, arrangement of safety valves, and the management. in the building of boilers. No doubt many weak points are made in the sweiting process; in the manner of drilling the holes, and placing too small a rivet leaving all the strain upon the heads of the rivets. Leakage of rivets and. seams, is a prolific cause of local corrosions. . When boilers are emptied on-Sat urday night, directly* , 'after working, and before the brick work has time to cool, they expand by . the heat remaining in the masonry; -and the boil er becomes in some parts hotter than: when it contains water,*and nets are sprang by the -.ex pansion. In the. arrangement of safety valves, so little attention is paid to this very important matter, that they_might properly be called "de structive valves." How often do we find an ar rangemeht of these boilers 30 teet long with one safety valve of about two inches in diameter, and any amount of iron hung on to the end of the lever. Every boiler should have its own inde- pendent safety valve riveted on the body of the boiler, with an area of not less than ten inches, -with an additional valve on the steam pipes be tvreen the boiler and -the screw valves, and this valve should have not lees than an area of Sixteen inches to secure safety.. ' Too much dependence is now placed in steam guages, water indicators, and low water al irma, all of which are a humbug, and only deceive the attendants. if boilers are properly set with the brick work below the the water line (and in most: cases it is above) the water kept at. about the same height in the boiler; and attention paid to' the accumulation of gas or , damping up, and the boilers cleaned out every month, and -biowed out every week; and plenty of safety valve room for the escapement of. steam,- and good and com petent engineers and firemen 'employed,- boiler explosions will be among the things-of the past. In many eases engineers are employed to 'man age boiler. and machinery, and besidesare re quired to look after-some other work, to run a bolt.cutting machine, dos., when thititnne should be employed in looking after his boilers, and again good engineers are often removed to make room for one-who can be.employed for say fifty, castle a week lower, :and again persona are employed to run engines and look after.boilers,' without the ' slightest knowledge of how. water is generated into steam, or what is the most economical man ner of making steam. Ilia the hardeat kind,-of work to make them understand that the - greatest amount of steam can be raised by keeping - a certain quantity of water at about: the same height, bat will.from time to time have the boilers full one gunge or none at .. . . • , • Bt.. Clair, Jul 10,1807 . • - H. B; 8. PPM. ream mak smumu3. mar%eni . ai r 850 diinkiniplacwin Melanin; tErThere eie iseven Repunilasn newepaparein, gifla • Atlanta, es; neirnnier'selli at tt e; aire‘4, rannmd:igitn beliiii.iaAugusta, ffir Cows graze oe the band district Of pmrlee., . • I@rThere were 81 oases of aimslllbox on last week sarSinuk, hint - via allot at Sinaithe.morn;-- . ' • tar There are ninety-eix olfl maids in one town in Connecticut,. ' • . • . • •.f Judge "Wayne, of the 1.7. 8. Supreme Court, died.on the.sth instant., sfir - Pans . spends 'twice its much money ; for wine sit it does for bread.' . , • WThe Orphans' Rome at Bridesbnrg, is to be removed to. Reading, Pa. . • - WA Yankee is gohig• to -tnrnieh Jeddo tmd • Yokohama with gas:light. .• .. • WA 5270 nugget s him been found at the Chan dlers (Canada) gold:mines. = • ' • • WPlessatit httabandly—destroyint the Weeds of a widow .by marrying her. • - Wllnder the-newl-Fi'orm bill, a seat of Parlia.;* ment will cost about 325,000. • • - . . • hatietit in'filinuesotik will alityv her tp eiperl.ls,()oo bushels of grain. • - : : • WThirty young colored men are stndjing for theministry, ln Richmdfid Va l ! ' • " • '• Sir Over. seventy cotton: factories have 'been built in Georgia since the. war. • itiarPeople who travel into 'cannibal .o:it:adrift' are apt to be 'turned into Indian meal. 117 The Frencli prize for_virtne.hais been taken by aballelgirl. aillariterre; this year:- • WEdwin-Booth bas cleared•over sitpoo from an'engagement of 30 nights in Chicago. • WAnother revolutionary. hem,-John aged 101, has been•disci3vered in Illinois. •. • • Wir The raft "Nonpareil" wail spoken on, the . 26th ult., *eot quite halfway. inn* the Atlantic:. /Er largaCatholic church is going up in Chi cago which will seat poo people, and cost lark wotnsn with s welt developed pair of black whiskers " visited • Goshen, -Ind., the ', other, • . §event,v4lve - eigen of infanticide.have been reported in New York city dozing the last abt, ffirlt is estimated that . the rate of taxatirin in New York bity forthe present year will be $2 65 • Sir Orithiledienaa wife°, eliteensrunmerehas prev - oted her husband, aged eighteen, with three . . sirA Spaniard, with only one leg-=.-infei-bull flehter—is announced to appear as a dancer. in , . • Pgr-Tlie wheat'bsrvest is pow . in prrigreas and there are very favorable'accounts from nearly all the StAtea. . . • . • Wien your wife is silent; hold the baby fur her. Perhaps it is as much as, she can do to hold her langur.. . n® - Tho Fourth of July was generally observed throughout the country, including many, places in tho Booth, . - • . . , . . . . tar A4'ew days since bliss Richings, the singer fell.down a - flight-of -steps ,and..injuri3d herself. considerably. . 'l,• - ielf•qnsh Biilinae eays : "Idarryin for -loYe may be a little risky, but it is ao honest that God leant but smile at it."- ' • • . . sa- At Salt Lake; cotton yarn -apim from Utah "cotton oel'a for 20 cents a pound more than yarn 'from the . States. - . • .• • , . * • figh - ReY- Wp.ltranti, fattier of-ZWm. B. Mann, Df*Striet Attsfney of Philadelphia, died a few days since. ased 83 years. - . ' •• -* fig-Pr.. Ciaiale, , the invontei. of litbetrity (the operation Of breaking- stone hi the. hdaddet) died recently,. aged 73. • Sarno burnt district in Vicksburg le being re. built, and doe - iron front stores are going up in, other-parts of the city. . • . tar The Rev. Mr. SpurgPon has the gout in one leg, an d • .with. cbitricteri'stic energy preaches standing on the other leg. . rhrDr. F. A. Muhleoberg,:-Mie of the oldest and most. eminent physicians in tboState, dieitak Lancaster,,on the Qth inet,. • • . • liirAfrs. 0: O.- Enntley, of Whiting, Vt.; gave. birth to three children a fetv days since.. They are all boys, and doing finely. A London letter writer, Oesliing.of the fashions, sap that boddiceetre - growing so small that they have almost disappeared.,• • ` Thomas F. lifeseher yul drowned at Fort Ttenton; oa.the Uptier Missouri, by .falling. off a steamboat, on the let instant. • ..' ' - - 'D General Buckner;-another of the Confeder- - ate leaders, is -burin favor of Southern recoil- . struction on the radical programme: • - • Sal - Mr. De Bodisco,. son of the late RuPsian Minister, wts niarried.this,wdek to.Misa Char lotte E. Rarton of Georgetown,,D C.. ••• AfirThe failure of George A. Wickes &.Co., drY gnodi mer Chants,• of New York; is announced. Liabilities in this Country, $2 : 500,000. One of the Pennsylvania railroad machine shops,- in Pittsburg, was burned no Friday. ,Leas from sixty to seventy thousand dollars. • - • sir A citizen of Greenbrier, West Virginia, liv- ing on Anthony's creek, was struck by a locust a short time pique. the result being almost fatal. • *An exquisite divine put the finishing touch' to a marriage ceremony 'when he concluded by saying : "I pronounce you husband and lady."-. esr The colored people of the Upper Ward; in Richmond, have decided to run a .colored candi date for Mayor, and three colored Candidates for Councilmen. . - . • • . . 113 - In Papstown, 111., a farmer buna himEnilf last week, the day after bis marriage to a beau tiful young girl,:bedausei gosidp said hig - wife had lived infamonslv. . . isa-The - Texas Republican Convention ad. journed On Friday, after adopting the• principles, of the National Republican party and approving the action of Congreas. . • - .The Republicans •of Maryland have 'sent a memorial to Congress .praying for the aboli tion of, all diktinctiona oerace and color in the ex ercise of the'right of suffrage. . . • SOPA number of men engaged in iron ship building in England have lost the sight of one of their eyes from the iron chips which are constant ly flying abort when they are - at work. airWe are unions to know how many feet in female arithmetic go to a mile, because we never met with a . lady yet whose aline was not, to say the very least, "a mile too big for her." - 11EirThe -last. instance of• commrinicathin with -spirits through a medium is that of )1 gentleman, lately deceased. 'who sent word to. his. wife, "I now believe. 'Please send me my thin .clothes." inrßishon Potter, Mr.. Raymond of.the Times, Mr. Henry E. Flwtetzer of the Round Table, Ur. M»rble of the World,.Col, 'Dacia+ of the Sunday Times—all New Yorkershave sailed for Enrope. sir General "Grant contemplates a visit to Look ont Mountain, and the scenes -of Shermaa's Georgia battles, abort the latter parte! July... He will be accompanied by .a party, of Congressmen. .lairGovenor Geary,hse appginted 'Colonel H.. M. Hoyt, of Wilkesbarre an - additional law Judge of the several Coniti in the . Eleventklndicial District, under an act passed by the last Legiela- sir A. young lady named nonillion, living near :Indianapolis, was horribly burned on Monday evening by an explosion of coal oil. Her .cloth ing was entirely consumed. There is no hope of Raysor, 'wife of Mr. Samuel Raysor, living•near Limerick Station, Montgomery..coun— ,ty; bad about 'three inches of the front part of her foot 'cur' off by a mowing. machine, on Wed nesday. July 3d. • J.,Westmoreland, British .Consul, was killed at Brunswick, Geo.; by one Captain Mar- - tin, on the sth. Deceased had been married but four hours. The murderer-was arrested and ta ken to Savannah. • • • lOTA lady wrote witha'diamond on ,a pane of glass : : - - "Man was at first made upright, bat he—" To which an impertinent gentleman added : "Most surely bad continued so, but she--" lErThey tell of one of the - nnterrifled -- at Bridgeport, Conn., who wag •especially eager to' pee the Presidential party; exclaiming, as he rushed Up •to the car,- • don't' careshucks abont.lohnlion ; it's Parson Na.shY that I want to . . fa - Pine apples in Paris aramade trots turnips, and are said to delicious. The turnips are satur ated with an appropriate`syrup, which code :Alen era know 'very well how to manufacture, and the French journals say the pine , apple '9B destined to become a success." • ' • AarThe testimony for the proseention in the Surratt case, cloeed on Saturday; and Mr. Brad-. ler, Jr , opened for the - defence, in a speech setting .fOrth-the facts to be •proved , by the defence. • . - These maiblY . tend 'to AO ALIBI, and the discrediting the testimony, for the prosecn- • wThe grand review which was to •take - plice in Hyde Park, London,,htufb-en.postponed by the English government, on account alba execution of lllaximilian. The conduct of the Mexican gov ernment has milted great indignation throughout Europe. The'Attatrian Court has gone into mow .firThere is a great gold Plethora in England, and the Bank of England haat $3.0,000,000 coin on hand that there is no call for notwithstanding the low , rate of interest. This is owing to the dullness in business and 'the falling off .iri the foreign trade, which has been ton per cent. since September. • .' lar The United Staten conga at Mauritius, un der date of May last, reports that the 'yellow fe ver was increasing . on the island; and had carried off nearly 30.000 peraons since - the 10th' of Feb ruary. Medical men were of the opinion that the pestilenee.wonid continue for the year. ' All .who c'nld leave the colony were doing. so. Sir The cause of the death of the Archduchess Matilda, 'of Austria, affianced le the heir of the Italian throne, has trimapired.. She wassmoking , a cigirette in her parlor; and when some one came in she hastily put it behind her, and her'dress, which was of light material, naught fire, and she Was burned to death. She was only eighteen, and very ranch beloved by the people. - " tir Fl wit zerland has about 3,500,000 inhabitants and 345 scientific and literary publications ;_ while France, with ten times the.poptilation, - has but about five hundred journals and magazines. The solution of this is in the fact that in Swltierland the .people all - receive some education,-and conee. quently can read, and 'take the papers while in France less than one-half can read. . • • Sir One of tbe most fearful and wonderful "sells" of our. ebildhood was. being :deluded into .half an hones frantic and futile gymnastic grasping at our simian the effort to - attain kreward prom-' ised if we succeeded in lifting.'ourselvee from the, ground thereby. This unsuccessful feat le ie- called to memory by reading.an item recounting how a young,lady was serionsly in by biting nails—not Iron nails, but - toe-nails. We are left in a painful state of doubtwhether the injnrywas accomplished by the . biting or by the general doubling up of the systeMneceseary for the'per forMance of the feat. • . - CANE ON JOHNSON. Col. Cake, the Collector of the Port, - is reported to have recently said a good thing to Mr. Secretary Mc- Culloch. . The Collector is known as a Mar Democrat, . which, since the close of the war, means almost: any thing in very many cases or War Democracy.. Since his acression to office be has removed officials "witha 'seeming sublime indifference as to wbaktheir politacal complexion was, and he has made , his appointments from partisan fish, flesh, fowl:and reptile, until his de-. partment is m such a condition politically that a load of gran-shot fired indiscriminately among them would kill off, in about equal numbers. Retnablicans, Copper beads, Moderate 'Democrats, Conservatives,' Dough; laces, and so on thron"h the entire category of modern partisanship. The other-day the Colonel received a, note from Seaetary McCulloch; who stated that be had beard with mingled surprise and indignation that he (the Collector) bad apiseinted to subordinate places in the Caen= Reuse "men who bad abused President Johnson.” To this charge Colonel Cake re sp onded that he did not know where to look for anybody who . bad not abused him. The Democrats abused him be fore hie election and the,Repnblicans since that event; so he had been abused all around. This was a terrible hit at the President, and none the less severe because of its entire truthfulness. It is fortunate for Collector Cake that there is a Civil Tenure - Bill in existence, or he and his motley crew of subordinates might look for- . ward. to a. spey application of the official axe, and the rolling of sundry beads mtothe basket of . the beads mazi.—Pamunceati. Evinersa Ber.r.errsr. Tns.New Orleans Republican has changed its opinion of Generil Sheridan. jour nal, just before the removal of. Clovenlor Wells, spoke out against the intrepid soldier, charging him, among other thingsi_ with. la-: capacity. It now thinks that he is not only a he.ro of admirable qualities, but a statesman of rare penetration and ability. The country agrees with the;last verdict. I;tAitran; of this journal, melted En- Tend on the 21et ultimo. The voyage across , the Atlantic had been pleasant, and Mx. Ban van's health, _it . Is satisfanurry to learn, - had R improved:'e purposed :auuting- - in, a few days for the enntMenti and waa probably, in Rome - on the centennial anniversary of the martyrdom of Peter, which Was °bowed in :that city with Wahl ceremonies and ... .... . . T-H . E.. . .. ••• • . •.. ... .. . . •... -- 1 ,- W ,- EXt 1 , ---.' •-017.-11.-N , -A• 14- • J:••13 7 •14••TY.•• . . . . • • • . ve . _ . ..; ... . . • . 1 .. . . . . . ....... , • . .. • Paesieioza Rarieriis.- - --Within• a radius of five miles frog!' th4i - pbotteattliis BoniUgh aerobe a population of st least thirty thou sand persoua.:',..Rottatikiiire: thickly strewn b"etweea:Pottsvitte hid the iniMediate tx4qtC. gnous boroughs, and it has king been felt to he a necessity that passenger . rail Ways should connect.theniti.th thillßorouih- Thematter was agitated:about a'year Once, aid a mute foi a thisagilik to: Palo Alto, Port Carbon and St. Clair, was sur veyed. Sufficient subscriptions to construct the road were not forthcoming, however, and the matter was - ilvaPped. Renewed interest we are glad to perceive, la evinced-in :the project We had the pleas ure ibiiiwiek.ol meeting Mr. Geo. Stearns of the firm of Stearns, • Whitney ,4t, Bridges; Philadelphia, who has passed over the pro posed route of the road from here, to St. Clair, - and who thinks, after a thorough in spection of it , that- the prelect Is - fesaable; shat the road can be bnilt and stocke(t, for- a sum not exceeding .4125,000, . and thatit is most important to the business welfare not only.of this Borough but of those boroughs with which the Toad.proposes to connect Thebusiztawmen of Pottsville are asked to subscribe $36,000-tolbe stock, to`be Debi . in instalments as the.road progresses to comple tion, and Ati. Stearns intimates that the bal aice, necessary to the Work will be forth- . • - To the storekeepers of Pottsville this mat ter is especially important, and it is to be loped for the credit of the business' enter prise of the town, and for their wafare,'that they with other businesimen, will , subscribe the sum needed from the BprOugh in order that the .Work may be speedily commenced. There Is not a business man lir PottiTilig."Who „ should not feel it his duty to subscribe tienord trig to his means. As an investment we believe it would pay the stoCkholdershandsomely. A meeting. in regard to this matter was held at Pennsijvania trail on Tuesday last, the proceedings of which - 'tie found in our local= columns. '. • • ' Tau Cpperheada have a . pleasant proppeet at the South. The neg:l3 will largely • out number •the white vote at'election time, and ninetpninnout *every hundred negroes will .vott the Reemblinaultlcket'., It la - quite prob. able that the next Republican candidate for . the Presidency, will carry every Slate in the °Won, except rebel . 4entucky. Repudiated• by the South `asvinlT ftti`br ihetisTortb, the beat thing tbe ShamDemocratic - part•y can do will be to die decently, and thus bring, lta careir to an ' NONE ,but the lowest of the Copperhead papers, attack the personal character, and prcltepsiontl ettainments Of Judge Williams. The More respectable of them speak in terms of the highest .cotrimendation of him. The Judge's majority will only .he. increased by assaults Itede upon him by reckless and irre sponsible jOurnalii,: - Condnoted the interest of .treason and Oppression:— BiADLit, AND Co?';PAY US William street,, New. York, have init issued their "Dime Speaker, No. 7." an excellent book for schools and young de .olaiinerti; and "Baldßagle," a - romance of Revo lutionary times, by Mrs. -E. :Oakes Smith. .We 'can, cordially commend Beadle and Company's Dime publications as moral and containing noth ing that will pander to.tice.: Whey artieheap and excellent. THE MASON & MAHLIN CABINET 'OIIGANS.—The higheatmusical anthoritiea of the land - have pro nounced in their favor, as - Mee:Mg a . warit which has long been felti and combining more reliable qualities than any other instrument of the char- . acter now before tlie , public .- Attiring other -ad -vantages in their favor, ility ocenpy little apace, ,are gotten rip in highly ornameptel style,-are re markable for their - great volume of aeund, the ease with which:they are played,- the simplicity of their construction; and their' adaptation to all kinds of mnsic.-Pittabtirg Dispatch,:, . • • J.Mu..Frcart respeetthlly Informs the dawns of Potts ville' an/ .viciniti, that she has reopened the 'ICH: CREAM and CONFECTIONERY: business at, the old stand on Centre street; Where she will -be most hap py to see all her old and neiv.friends. Ice•. dream of all flavors and or finest quality served/it the shortest Pottsville Apill 19, .6T., IPamma. ifigUatLand American clothe, all styles,' and of the finest qualitiee, at D. A:. Smith% Centre street.. GO* Neck-ties and Bose, to suit every taste, and at reduced prices, at D. A. Smith's, C,entre street.. . Sax A wows in another column picking grapes for Speers Wine.. It ts an admirable article, need in the hoapitals and by the aist • class &Mines* in Feria, Lon don and New York, in preference. to Old Pat Wlne:—. It is worth a trial, as it gives great satisfaction.' • F1312;011 . Papuan Lunta pintas, a beautiful article, a .1), A. Smith% Centre street—. . • ' ' • • • THE COAL TRADE. The quandiy sent by railroad this week:is 61,262 12-:,-by canal 26,409 10-for - ithe week 87,642 02 tons against 112,129 tone for the corresponding week last year. We hive. no ,new feature - to note in ' the trade. It continues exceedingly dull. Some Collieries have stopped operations, and it is not unlikely others will be compelled to stop until the trade revives. We never knew the trade heie to be in Amore prostrated condi tiorilhan it is at present.. We trust that .a Strong effort wily he. made to'prontiree.Pro tective Tariff at the next session of Congreap, Tor without it the ftiture of business through out the country willdark. • • 'The trade sums up -this' week as follows, compered with last year : PaRRE- 1 &Inv' Can L Val R Lehth Can Serant St.h. N`th Penn. C. C By It Road By Canal.. Ikl & Hdd Wrng Sth do Nth Stuunokln.., Trevorton..i Short Mt. . . V. C 0... Williamarn Broad Top '• • • . • ••Nast Toss. Jelly-8. 18 11 hereby given that titer Arm of BEIL -1.1 NER & eII'AMBLRLAIN is thie day dissoltred by mutual consent. said disecauttorr to take effect on the First day of July. Either , of the &ware authorised to settle the outstanding sect:mote. • . • '; • . CRAB. HAMBERLaIfar. -.. • • • PERCY B. HEIVNER. ' - : . Yaw . Yon', July a, 186 i. - Notice is hereby given that a partnership was formed on the first day of July ; iSiT, between CHAS. CHAMBERLAIN, Ja.; Of the City of Elizabeth. N. J and•JOHN C. CONNER, :of the .City of Philadelphia; Pa., under the firm name of CHAMBERLAIN & CON. NEfl, as Commission Merchants and Dealers in Coal.' . CHAS. LEAMBERLAIN, ja. • ' • JOHN C. CONNER, . . . . . : . • . ABALANI, Pa. Jane 80. IEO7. This la to certiry that my sons, JOHN . J CONNER & BROTHER, are, on and after this date, the only au thorized auents for the sale .of my Locust Mountain Coal In the New York and adjacent markms, and that they are hereby directed to Regime the control and min mnerit of such sales in New York. JAIL J. CON- This le to certify that the right se sole agents for the sale of J. J. Conner's Locust Mountain Coal, astivert tinder date of June 80, by James J.: Conner to his eons, John Q. Conner and ; Bmther, in New York and ' . . - the adjacent-markets, anal the-authority to sesame non= trot of pnch sales in Nevi York is hereby given to the gran of CHAMBERLAIN & CONNER by mutual con sent and - agreement of J. C .. CONNER t BROTHER, mad by sanction of Col. James J: Conner. . ju1y.0.707-21.2t ,-. C. CONNER & SAO. • THE NEW" YORK dz ISCERITL IPio~-. KILL COAT.- COMIPANT• 'solicit froth experienced parties. proposals for leasing the six .Collkaies heretofore _worked. by the Company.' and 'known IS • HECKPCHKRV/LLE: - 'THOMASTON. BLACK HEATH and FORESTVILLE, situate In Case Township, &DOM'S' County; Also,. OTTO WHITE ASH and OTTO RED ASH, situate in Reilly Township:. They . are-it, good , order, with reachinery.complete, and coal CIM be shipped from them without delay.— The average distance from . the collieries to Schuylkill Haven is ten miles.. - •. The collieries may be examined by application to W. G. BIRNNY; Clerk, office it ' the. oce .91 'the Company; W Por tome. ' & addreseW .DAVIS, P;O;ldent, Woodtdde; County; oz No. JO Szchiinge Place. New York. Woodside; June ST,,GT NOTICE,'.-Mr. Wm. Reed' haring with . drawn from the 81131 of SHARPS, WEISS & CO.; the remaining partners will conttnnethe twinees. of minth and selling Coal as heretofore, and settle all ontt g amounts ; the name and . style of. the firm being unchanged.. They iake this opportunity to re tarn thanks to their former curtomers. and sett a don tinntnce of their orders for Comae it laidge Coal. which they are prepared to forward in tine order and in tucreaftd "quantities; having recently . added to the' productive capacity of the Colliery, they will tute their best efforts to deserve the patronage e of those needing a superior article of &el. . - • SHARPS; WEIf3S & CO. 138 Walnut Street, Rhiltukiptda, • I ..- Schley innerne Cpuntji-Pelpia; PATENT IMPROVEMENT' OF STEAM ITICB.-.T• all whanEll may Canter* t—Por tu.d in conaideratkri of a-- in hand, paid by . JAMES WREN of the b f Pot:tank, Coan=f EirM l 7 l kill: to Lereeren of Philadelphia, . receipt, whereat's. ad m it aham.Kila. sem i to .eald Wall rig a tc or t apply.lt It _kill, Fate af vents, on all - Steam Ia me or that may matter be niedilewiet 'l le7., m aui ddessmed Cm", for Res.* . . , owpaandam—f for which letters ant, d a t e d . .. l a.. 19,. 1861, have been ßi zat . ! to the add Lewiaidlosoligry the - persons desirous id loftmadm regarding the N i t' of thbrValve CM2 reeehat the mom at no Mete in Coal drat.' -Theoes benellt of this Valve to all penman, tudou Maim W b IMO SO to - 40 per att. on t op bed drirti=. area be. vo„ed to all old emtad tolake part m a builL ot. ant lomt. - - , , They . tan Notre :trams* the nee ihe building sew enema and elm for patting Om int: grommet on Old engines. , - They tan - lee the allikut at toy moths to Mal street, - where I hove ban my en gine wortdm M the ardn. hereinateted. . - Italia tin be seat MO & Brands Eskat - MMus as 13Favi ismiltdo A )1010 011 2 " ' .TAM '' W 44 4 0 4 10/ ka W t E W Weeks. , & oNrt .. . -:..a ir_. ..- . LOCAL Ncyriczs. PoOurtlle. July 13..1867. -1- - 61,2 1,694429 d 2.29,945 -26.910 • . 458.725,d175 817. .9%181 999.20' ' 00,198 - .27.602 226,604 d 51.124 nos : 0 - c1;550;"119.289 8,934 i 2.01,576-d - .4;499 879,2041.279,611' 8 2291 d 534542 d' 14,592 49,717 1 d 115 0 ,76 • 236,640 1 4 , 9,446 - - 21.1.1 P Id 2.405 . 29.138 , d 8,20 20.531.1 ' P. 9,1 .42,80x1 27.511 1.49,23 10 11 -21,619 1.982,PC' 6 '6,666 t,938.522 878,028 52124'8, 206,065 79,097 93,03 V .40,673 12,70' 19.80; 8,279' 260,206 43.599 92,609 23, 4 20 i 16,2911 140,9r4 ' 1 5,769,599, A CARD. . Tun nership heretofore ex blunt between , - ..SOWSitBRSSD, is this d a idhaid . eeabymittual content: ...Imes lte.d 41 0 6,yairbortiedto setae the outetandinx hardness of the-'atedxm: _:J 13 tloltSit, Boston, 74 2 7 . 7 1 . 1 7-.. • sebeerlberresilerifnny,infoima' thitrade find be hy , h a l , appointed - Bete. Agent tor the liastere. Motet, of the - Arida - of -Dony. Bentley a Co:, and John J. Ducey, Son a .Co.. of. Philadelphia, Itii3ereand ..Thippe w na.peetiveleo. Uthe , ....Preateo- end Gil . kers°, !snow prepared to. tapply all • orderafor tbkie celebrated'Colds:. • saluasji.. IDEED, No: le, Doar.e. Street : Solmaßant far theßsatern Market. &mei% .. • : id- • -.^ r noses' sr T•lio amid Traa•Poriation; JUNE isa pi i d.,ListannA Llrf Rximpio 11.1.4.146&D, Froni Pottsville to Plailidelptila - • • , • do" • do Port Rithoand."...„. • : dO •, • •-•": do . Newriaiir. , dravrback-otT.. Soonvurtir." RiVIGATTOR. nrOm POUPPIIie to Phllatieipta, • do._ . do. New York. drawback Off:. Oveza Aveircra." . • From Manch 'Chunk to Philindellibia, Canal, hick- - • • • .4• • "dinfciiiikaoling . do . to 'Philadelphia: ada.Nortb Penna. R..... 4 00. do to Elizabethport via N. J. Ceetral li. R - 202. do to Port Johnson • • ' • 2.10 • do. • to'Neiv York. • ' do 'to New York via Del Dlv. and 11.4ritan Ca- 463 . ; • nal.:lnchaduag unloading. .... ,2 67 • do.. to New York via morrt 4 Canal do to Hoboken ;la: Itioriis andAssei.l2- 2 10 - -de to New . .. —. ' • - 220 From Filzabetbport to . Buffalo : via New York • - : a distance of ahrait 450 miles—. • . • •,freight, 21 62—t011, TS cents • • 3'40 The ibippiEg' expenses - at lillzabetbriort and Port Johnson vary from 26 to 00 cents.. : COAL • ' Freights from Ft: EIGATS, cknaond i I d!ti." Poughkifnie.. ; 140 Penamontn ~' . . 2.60 Portland 930. Pawtucket 9 12 Providence' • 2 03 Salem. .. . 2 -25 Watren..- . ..• • . 9. to - Newburyport " .2 69 QttincY Point "- 2.30 Cfotine '2 44 Mystic . • •2 In Hallowell • • 3*2 Lretby Conn . • • " 2(0 rriveo for. week. • • .' Ameibut;Point..." , 2 eai Boston ... 9 25 Chaflbown t 25 Davensport .. 2 .2( Fall .... 200 Bingham 2 40 Lynn . . 2 35 Marbleßead 2 .0 -Medford 2. 75 New roik 150 Norwich - • • 2 '4O Nnw Redf0rd.:...... 2 00 ..... . Ts v,etwelo sod t 3 nous* • Eltzabethport:. piewburyport 1.65 ;New Lcmdon " 115 Pawtucket • , • Taunton • • bI. trove New York ' • $ 55 Fall River , 1 45, Newport " , 4 5 Bestori ...• 7. 75 Norwich • - 301, 'Providence.. 1.401 Norwalk..* , ~, , . ... 1 00' Midd1et0wn......... , 1 25 Portland 1 . 75 lialem ."" " .1 S 5 Alliany. 3 100 Dew Haven, • • 1 00 IPortemouth 1 5.3 (;New Bedtord..: • IAZ Bridgeport' • • 1 GO dardord..: ...... 'I. 00 Eittdeork. • .1 00 Lynn • . EreigtiostrocuAlkeorg To Philadelplila - New .York town . ' or _Alexia drioi $145 , a ' 1042 a, Frlesh4 from.l nJiimore. To Philadelphia. New Yore...'.. THE COAL INIARK_EMS. 19110E8 OF oonBY Ti.E . 0.A.11GO; Rimier= iMiCiar roe TIIT imrsaus. :mama- I 'AT PHILA D EiLPHILC • rap. E.VIZEISZ: 811 - IPILENT. • - ,Ta'27 - 12, 1867. 4 7501. 00 SOdO • 4 250 4 250' 4 254 • 4'250 3 000) 4 25' 4250' 4_'250 4 35 4 250 435 300 :315 5:250 5 10. 5 25-0,. 5.60 5.250 •• 5250` 4 250 .6 100 • . a: oh"ytkill Red Ash 'Prepared,... l a chestnut, •• , 41. white Ash Lump g. St. Bost and Broken. , E gg ' o Stove .. : ... • .. . .. Chestunt, Locust Mt. LTUIIII,, ' - " St. Boat and Broken ' .. Egg " Stove 41 . ' chestnut, . . ... Lehigh Lunap " , St. Boat and Broken ' Egg ": Stove " Chestnut,. Broad Tort, ' SPECIAL COAS • Hill k )18.1i113 . , tnmp .... . .... . 4 vica St. Boat and Broken.. 4 50g • Egg... ... ... ... 4 t10(.7 Stove. 751 - 6 0 . :.Cheatnnt. ' 3 75g 3.90 . .The'following prices are for ' shipments' east of Stoniegton, :Conn:, by • Chia. J. and J. H. Burnside, Broken... ..... .... 4.75© Egg • ' - 5 00.0 " Store • • • 5 , " Nut: • . 350 . 4 ! Pea -- • 2 75'a Lorberry Coal, • . 4 503 Franklin, (Lykens Talley) • 5 25' . All coals desired to be reported speqal, will be i)ut.nuder this head. provided the !potations are fur nlehed by the parties.intereated: • •: AT NEW . YORK. • '• • , July 180. Bohuylkill Red • Ash by Boat L0ad...6 5 - 750 6 25 a' - Chestnut, " - ... 4 500 Ash Lump .. . , 5.50® 5 7 5 • - Steam Boat lad Broken:: 5 ZOO 575 Egg. - 5 506 a Stove ' 5 .50.x:6 75 aChestnut, • • 4.250 Lehigh White Auh LurOp • 5 75.; ' Steam Boat and 'Broken ' 5 75Q .; Egg ; 5 aya 575 ." Store - ' 5 -5043 •5 75 " Chestnut • -4' . 75' . 'Lehigh Coal at Elizabothpait. Lump, by Cargo • 5 75@ - ' St. Boat and Broken " " ........ 5 500 . Egg; . -" " .6 50( 675 Stove, " " .... 50(a, 575 Chestnut • - ." . " • 5 00© - Sc. anionVonl at Elizabeibporb Lump, . Auction . prices $ 4 60(dg Steamer, ' ".. .4 59,D • . Grate ' " ' 4 04g Egg. - 4 841 ' Stove, . • •.• • • 4 64 , ,a Chesttnit,.. "" " •-• • 4 csa. At private MOO 25 to 40 cents a ton advance. Freight to New York GO.cents per ton. Penna. Company's Coal 'nl Newburgh. Lump, • • Auction prices $5 SO St-Boat and Bioken, 5 - cog • Eggs, Stove, . " 6 00c4 ' Cbestnut,. " 4 At private sale 25 to 42 cents aton advance. • . • Freight:till-Jew Tbrk 70 rents per ton. • . Del. di CO.li Coal ni Roundont. (Circular prices for-Jane and July, 1847.) - 'Steamboat Chertntit " ••••• 4 TO . From Rootidout to I , test , York, TO cente ft ton freight . r •• '• AT BALTIMORE. • ". • . -J uly 12, 1867. • To trade from Tard or - wharves: Wilkee're 4-Pittston W. .R6.25ia 6 50 Lukens Tali R. /lash— : 25@ 6 50 Shamokin, white or . ... 5 50© 6 60 Delivered.teconiumere,...:: . . . 7 00®•7 50 Georges' creek andrennabSrinad Coal:. • - r o. b. at Loenet Point for ahipplng.• At 5 25®, 5 40 Georgetown, D. - G! • 5 00® 5 25 Cnnaberlnad Coal Trade. T°Di;ntleraltlreng Ohioßailroad for tteyeNst, year 1966, 1867.. Quantity reported to May IFt. 251.911 96 837,993 14 TromMay ut. to 91,414 00 • T 1,572.14 Increitso In 1867 . . Co.Railronds..for The following is the quantity of coil tranatorted over the following 'Railroads for:the week ending on Thurs day evening • • • .. . . . .. ... ... . WILFUL .' TOTAL. 1:141e 11111 & S. H. 11.11;.. - ..' .... 31,353 03...168,135T It Schuylkill Valley " ' 8,535 10 120.08 i IS . Mt: Carbon • ' -Ana 01'. .10 635 12 Mill Creek.- - • • ' -1,12 S 15 1T2.237 0 - Mahandy & Broad Alt - ' .25,703 08' 035,10 IT 'Lit le Schnylklll..... .... ..... :. , , , - , . • . - . ~ .. . - • - . ' BLACK BAND 'IRON ORB. • .. , Sent over the Mth Creek Ban Road For the reek ending on Saturday fast, Previously, tiwnl Trade.by Rtiilrosui and Canal 1867 'St. Clair ' Port-Carbon, Pottsville • • Schuylkill Haven Auburn , .... . . Port Clinton ' 61.232 12 1,630,859 00 l '. rei i o TL3 l) l t z l ): week Totei To same time ladyear •'• 259 p 45 17 Increase Lehigh de Itlahnnoy Coal Trad6 for 1867, Weekending with Ins . t. SatnrOny. • limas SLUPPERB. . ' • Trenton Coal - Company.. .... . Mount Etna ' • . Mahanoy Co Delano- Colliery - • .• Glendon Coal C,onipany ..... . Rathbun. Stearns a Co • B. S. Stillman' ' McNeal Coal do Iron Company.. Knickerbocker Coal Company. • • Thomas Coal Company: Williams & Herring -Shamokin Valley. Cos! Company New Boston - - • . . Other Shippers Total .. . . .. Corresponding. week: last year. • Lehigh Coal Trade far 11367. : For. week aniline on Saturday taut: • - • • - RAILROAD. ' • OPERATORS. . • WUL worm.. TOLL. Hazleton..: 4,237 56,672 r 914 25,341 But Sugar Loaf_ 0,126 55,240 • Mt. Pleasant. 265 5,053 260 1.905 deddo',.„:”• . .3,255 55,097 1,575 19,560 Marlolg/. 1,045 .14,966 • 570 5,395' Ooze Mot . • • ' 471 4,038. "Habana's coal Co.. 2,217 28,505 565 12.623 Stout. • • 767 13 954 5.:15 7,911 Council - Ridge •• 1.31 S 36,460 861 11,203 Buck Mountain:, 949 22.57 , . 1,006. 17,16 S Newyork & Lehigh 1,990 51.009 569 4,608 Monet Brook Coal C 2,541 73,99, . 722 • 10,095 German Pa. Coal Co . .995 29,150 127 11,473 caai Co. 2,042 71.331 94 15491 W: ig rains 1,374 • 47;501 2EIO • Beaver Meadow. " 65 115 'John Conners • ' - WS& • . USIA Zinc Co 3. B. Reber *Co... ' McNeal. • 1,525 51.385 • . 1 .1,846 Knickerbocker C 1123 29,46'• .••• • .1,073 Coal Ran Coal Co. . • • .Rathbun ti; 135 21,514 . .." Glendon Coal C 0.... 4 3 7 11,977 ' • 16, 121 Ca . 737 o • Mallaw: Ca • • 11,977 385 . .564 Delan .Billiman • • .1,753 65,05 Baltimore Coal Co.. 541 24,823 826 7,633 litanklim, • - 8.3 0 7 .37 6 '.2,804 . . .. 231 4,50 438 2.1342 Lehigh & Soso. Co.. 31 . -.11,246 •94 2,74 r, SO • 8,6 02 4 5 9 ' 3,9:t0 • Wilkeabarre.... . .843 39,872 1 , 856 • Ir. nao %tut Run • ' 1,630' Parria or h & 'rhomas. . 190 22 , 452 653 *" • .9,ota- Lelk. Coal & Nay Co t • . 10,870 111,614 radctird= Co. . ' • . ' l 1,813' •01.193 e 95r ' • • AM% Xt. Etna. * I 1181 • - North Mahmoy' 479 _Walter Baia. is Co.. . ' • • ' 63 . . kreey Coal Co.. 840 9,4r1 • ing . 2,100 John MAUI, ds 00. • "191. Trent.n Coal C 0.... . 1,149 ' 185 Union Coal Co . 7,469 tin 4,131 Nirlonaiim ow Co.. 13,581 277 4,199 . • . • .89,181 999.260 Von aqn.alt ' • • • 27 , 607 825,904 • Tata by:Las Canal st,rsi 1,1126.061 • Vial tines last year. 53,2791,313,45. . . • DIMON 4,1f 4 • NEW ADVERT7AIENTR , Navy. ST VI.IC „TEC „ 141.049413 o p. fin- Mei tame Ott beikWaTrYlnould ed.- and there lie slight' rltost top-ior tent over.—. Alio Penult etbm. kind% iotiWlitlr !ore to tie over. end the beet ale tight freitlare in the twaket. at - TROYEINS Chine, cibsse and :Creehery , Ware Store, 856-Ceatre St. • July 13, 'nrt—its•tf • FREELAND - SEMINARY' lta Fill Tarte of 1%7, orr MIOMIDAIf, JULIE 31116.: "Por Catalogue contalnlngt fell, par ticulars, addreea . • A. H. PETTEROLF, A. M. Panelist, ' drily 14-1 S 6t Freeland, Montentee , 7 Co„ Ps. • • • • .11 • W.E . WT 0 N .AGENT .FOR. THE. SALE: OF LU CAVIIC6 :T 12431ZET BALEEtHAY. WISE ROPE," itc. Office Centre St, .Bdll,xv Itnilding—entrani:e • ant dOor to Masntife. Hall,` . • July Is. RiCM NEALARIVAC'teIItr:-.4 Th e under ' signed bare entered Jute •CO PartnemblTY.f:w the CiirT.' - 'parties ,:it=f4Brlacintie are - prepared mall gnantitWg to suit :parthavre.: 'Being eltirded on the Mine Hiii : Railroad. we are pre pa red to shin to any . point. JOHN OMIT T. RICH... Julf 2ln Summon - to Samuel Amman. - :PATRICK C.OriII.EFORD, - .: . And Dealer in all sorts of MAR AND 'WOOD= WARE, - " 106 cOntre Street,.Pott4ville. Inventor of a nem. and eeanomical :WINE PRIM; also oi, the new and ingeniong spiral motion CHURN: 137 — Orders 'respectfully solicited.. ' ' -• .• . • July 13 'Ol • ' 23 ant CHEGARAY INSTITUTE . FoR Vita% LAIES, . • 1327 and J32p:Spince . Madame.VIEERVILLY ; Princip . . . open on . • ' IFRIDACYOSeptember 401114 Board dud tuition per annum • • • I ' t 450 •;" fo oi r steZe o a r nti thr French fit th e . langua g e of the am? is eon. &flatly sunken" in the Lastitate... . ' - • Jaly.l3, .- • . • • 234 m . 1r EMT'? aitte' Eternalising Unclaimed ha -LA the Poet Otte, at Pottsville, • State of lenmylira •nla.. on the 13thday. of July. .1367. . To obtain any of these letters, the applicant Most MB for "advertised letters,. give the date of- this Bit, and pay one : cent for advertising.' . • Hnot balled for within one month they will be seri to the Dead Letter Office. . „ Anlenbach Al . Flanigan B W Myers Minnie Bryan George Gillespie P•al • Prosser. Thos • Bevely 31rs J N Hanna James • , Pheltin•Jas sii Carter ItAt. • Hoy Bridget • • Itiegner dr Erb • COMICOR Dan Holum-Sarah eh Ramsey 'Seabee' Colin.' Elisabeth Kirk Rosanna Scheirer Joe H 3 Ctuutton Elitabth•Mtiore•G -," • ' Sboom Jahn - Cranly Mary '• McDonald Daiid Smith Win Donsherty Robt :Major Jamm • .Troy,,Gen Duggan Julio' Martin James Tenityck Beni B V .Dotogi. Joseph ...Minattan Steph eh N, • , Donohoe Mirld McDermott' Sarah • • ' July 13, '67 . SII.,LTMAN. P. H. 2 10@,, 2.25 : 21124.2 4.1 GRAN•D.PIC=NIC • • OF THE •:.* . . . GermanCathohc . CongregatiQii • : OF, .POT TSV:IL LE, . Onthe . Grobids 'of the Agricultural Park, ON MONDAY, .11:1LY...224.8, 1.867. • ADMISSION; $1 -• • . : . ••• The "pithlie is hereby informed •• that: the GERMAN CATHOLIC (3T- JOHN'S) CONGHEG AVON' of Potts ville will give a Grand Pic-Nic on the above day; the proceeds ot•which will be devoted to the building of -a new.Chnrch. :All civic associations, and the citizens of Fottsville and vicinity In . aeneral; are respectfully invited to participate:. Addresses will be delivered in the English and German languages. The - best of tousle and plentiful supply of iefresh ments will be on the gronnds. • .• • Cronscrras,George Reinhart. Andrew . Hoh. Joseph Liebn-r, Gen. Dimmerling. Foydinand Boedekli: • .July 13, 'di . ,' _ . . 1867. Spring Arrangements. lB67.. IaMNSSVINANIA IDENTS.AL R.. R. I This Cmnpany, has recently placed on sale at Potts- ville. a large atonic of through tickets to all principal. Western points, including • CHICAGO; r • . • LOUISVILLE; • • ' CINCINNATI, . MOBILE. " • . ". COLUMBUS, t - • • ' MEMPHIS.: •: ' . .• CAIRO.,".sRAsEA CITY, • CLEVELAND, . - NEW ORLEANS,' • lOWA CITY. OMAHA • • .INDIANAPOLIS,: QUINCY : • • KANRAS HOCK ISLAND, LEAVENWORTH, • 'BT. LOUIS, ' And all principal points West, Northwest & Southwest. Baggagechecked to Pittsburgh." Before reaching that Point an .Agt. of the Company-' will pass.through the Cars rechecking bsgeage to destination. " Only one change."_ of care from Pottsville •to - Pitts-. Paesengerileaviniz..Potterville P. M. , Arrive at Harrisburg s.3n,:r. H.. and Pittsburgh at 9.411.. k. M. Leaving.Pottsville at 8.45,A. "M:. arrive' at Harris-' burg I M.. and Pittsburgh at 1.90,;A. AtPittt.Mmth cloeenonnections are made in the new Union Depot with the trains for all western points. For farther Information apple tn. E. H. WHEELER... March,lo, .17-11.- Agt. Phila &Reading R. R.-. The ftteilities possessed by oar firm for tbeAranSai- • tion of the business of general advertising agents, are noW generally admitted to be superior to those of any similar establishment in this country. , Our special: .contracts with: most of 'the . leading newspapers tbroughOut the Eastern, Middle and Western Stateii;• give us advantages over all other agents, no t only - in the pticPat which we are enabled, to contract for, but. the position we secure' for our custcimera' in the col umns of the newspapers, and - the promptness and . care with which all our advertisements are inserted Persomi interested in, advertising should make them; • .• • . selveS 'acquainted with our facilities before con tractlng- WereCeire orders for all newspapers, at the Moat fai vorable rates. ' ADVERTISING AGTS A.DYERTI.S,ING:AGTS, ADVERTISING AG-TS., 13,326 OS .. 409,859 OS 343.926 OT RODMAN; FISK & CO, l BANKERS =ME 28,960 00 b SISS 01 12,02 a 10 559 04 17,45 T 011 (3' 9,390 10 13,352 00 Boy and sell at market rates' Biz' per Cent. 'Bon& of 18S1 r Five -Twenty Bonds all -• butnesi Ten-Forty Bonds • Seven-thirty Notes, all series: Compound In terest Notes. and Gold and Silver Coin. • Convert all series of - 1-80 Notes intothe New.Cm- solldated 5.20 Bonds at the best market rates, Execute, orders for pmehase and sale of all miscel laneous securities.. . • • • . • 20,409 10 427,825 07 463.734 17 699,50 09 1.892.12112 1,922.07,09 • .Receive 'Deposita and allow 5 per cent. Interest on balances, subject to check at eight. . , Make collections on all amessible • All Penes of Qinernrcient . Securities credited or re mitted for, on receipt, at market rates; Fees of, all commission charges. • • :It. F. & Co. 175,840 12 VAINTS FOR FARMERS . , And Others...THE GRAFTON MINERAL PAINT COMPANY are now manufacturing the Best, Cheap: , est and most durable paint in-use two coats well tut on, mixed with 'pure Linseed 011. will last.lo or 15 years; It Is of light_ brown or beautiful chocolate colhr, and can be changed to green. lead, stone, olive. Arab or cream. to unit the taste of the consumer. —lt fa valuablefortionses, Barns, Fences. Agricultural Tut- . plements. Carriage and Car makers, Palls and Wooden ware. Canvas, Metal and. Shingle - Roofs, (It being lire and Water proof), Bridges, Burial Cases; Canal Boats, Ships and Ships' Bottoms, Floor Oil Cloths. (one man ufacturer hating-used 6000 bbls. the . past yelr.) 'and as a paint for any purpose unsurpassed for body. dura bility. elasticity', and adhesiveness. • Price $6 per bbl. of 300 lbs:; which ' will a farmer for years to CAM'. Warranted in all cases as above. Send for a circillar.'which - gives fall particulars. None genuine unless branded In a trade murk Grafton' Mineral Paint. Address .DANIEL BIDWELL, Proprietor. 264 Pearl St.; New York. . • ••••• Jutel6,---244t 10.213 30.410 11.901 21.317 58,328 53.251 80,591 14,564 7.620 1,316 6,204 135 1.7 1 12 1,866 324. 849 , 352 363 760 "BEYOND THE'MISSISSIPPI STATES AND TERRITORIES,. From like Great River to the Great Ocean, OVER 20*0 COPIES SOLD TII ONE HOTEL Life and Adventures On IPrairies, Mountains, and the Pacific Coast. With over 200 De scriptive and Photographic Viewol of the Scenery, (ides, Lind, Minis, People and Cariosittes of the New States and Terri- . To prostective. emigrants and settlers in the "rar West;' , this History of that Tut and fertile region will omen an invaluable speistance; supplying as it does a want long felt of a ffdl, authentic and reliable, guide to climate; soil, product% means of travel. &c. • ' Send for Circulars and see our term% and a full de l saint on of the wore. Address •NATIONAL PUB LISHING CO, iiOT Minor street. Philadelphia, Penns.' waled . $l5 / 7 1 ".... A tif-M i s ITETTI A r4 B WHITS CLOTHES tans...* walker 30" years: ad ddress :the AItEMICAIS WERE Office .182 33. roa- TO ADVERTISERS. .GP . .- - P. POTE:I4.I& :po„ ..GEOi..l7(l.POW.Etili .. & -0 . ().; .GEO,' i P . , ..PQWELL & .-Ock 40 PARK ROW, 40 PARK: ROW, 40 PARK ROW, NEW YORK.. NF,w;x:ORK NEVV''''YORIK..' , . GOVERMENT SECURITIES; N 9. 18 Nassau St:, NEW YOBS, COMPLETE IIISTONT OF THE BY•ALBEST D. RIM:URIXON "EVE . BY'BODY 111 LOVE WITH IT."‘. A Week is a preach Comstry Ussame, 4317 MBE: ADELAIDE (11EMBIA) gat EOM. =lndere story .h - ts met with seek unbounded praise ; wilt bare the widest populaitzt. repay*. rem, price BO catti. F or b BARNAIi • • - • TE VAMEIR • deligittal now novelliy xta. Knii Rath", whaee briokl are read and- terrea4 oto do much Vom.. Pries t $1 so. For Ws it. MAZUR . MUT ALLEN & NEEDLES' IMPROV 't,11)..:.,::-; SUPER PHOSPHATE THE REST, THE. CHEAPEST, - 'THE.MOST ITNIFORIL _ 'THE MOST WISELY Prepared:. • • PHO S PATEE In the =arta._ It Is packed In .`"-" ffew Bags, 200 WA. Oak $5O perft•Oß Bahl. LALEGi Ihsootrivr DRApia. PERUVIAN.. CUANIO. We eell only No, 1-4eeetved direct from% FARMERS - I BUY AND DNS ALLEN .& NEEDLES' ,!NXON'UTECI FERTILIZER,, THE. BEST,_ -____2 CIIEALIPEST. TUE MOST RELIABLE I\i_4NlTlth FOR WHEAT & RYE, And tolxtrtnanently enrich the poll. Packed In • Good tiny. 150 lbo. arch. • , • . $35 per .2000 pounds. .• • A'REAVTDISOOIJET TO DEALERS:. . . agricultural Works, Beach and Paint Sta.,. - 00kes.‘..a*Stares,.. 41 N. Water... St. a 42 S. . EaILAUSLPSIIII. • 'July 13, la ' • . • . Cers!t Combines . in one garment a -rscr STITINQ Colour, and, most 'sizable Skirt Supporter ever of the public. • It awes the welt the skirts bpon . the rhouldet stead of the hips t.it improve, form without tight lacing ease and elegance; is approved recommended by physicians; datum' by : • D. D.: r"CE.GS AND. ARMS . . . Invented by a Surgeon. Nine patents In , - • /OW, ranging from $5O, through all the lin . " nmvemonts. up to the Anatomical Ler.. with Lateral motion at Ankle, like newt I 0... et-$ll5O. ' . . Two patents in Arms, with new 'Shoulder motions, $75 to $125. - Send for pamphlet. It contains valuable information:and it sent free: • • '. - Ornheic- 459 BcoadwaY, N. Ti; Rocheater, Yi. Chicago, oppeelte Port Office; Cincinnati, 145 :West Fourth et ; St. Lents, 413 Pine St Addrere, DULIGT.4 ‘S SLY, M. D., .at dearest Office, THE - ADVERTISERS' GAZETTE Every Business Man should take it, Price One Dollar per annum in ad vance: Office 40 Park flow, New fork. only la. . 28.4 t (11.TARTERLY REPORT -OF THE N.A. — CONDITION OF THE MINERS , NATIONAL BANK 01 7 .POTTSVILLE, of the State or Pennsylvania. on the-mowing of thane% Monday of July, 1567 RESOURCES. ' . 'Lonna and Discounts - $694,041 14 Overdrafts Other Real Estate • • 26.068 21 Current Ifipsrises2,s33 69 • Cll9ll. Items (theeks on- other Banks) • -53,055.27 Due from National Banks • ' 162,713 36 U. S. Bonds Deposited with .U. S. Tress- nrer to secure Circulating Notes • 400. 0 00 00 U.S. Bonds.on hand - ' 6.150 60 Other Stocks.-Bonds and Mortages 96,615 42 kirculatitig . Notes of other' Na • Bona! Banks • • 31,259 00 Do. of State Banks -• 2,660 00 • •- 33,919 00 ractional Currency Legal Tender Notes 08,393 00 Compound Interest Notes 71,590:00 . . . . $1,616,?5S 10 . . Capital Stock paid in . $500.000 00 Surplus, Fund • - • • 100,000 00 Circulating Notes.rece - iced from• .. '• ' ' Comptroller • - - ' 860,00000 • ' . • Lem amount on -hand .-- • • 810 00 - - - • .3.mount outstanding • . • • • 350,190 . 00' Iridlildnal Deposits - - , ' ' • ..- 450.757 18 Due National Banks •" • '' . .: 135,115 DI Due other Bankaand Bankers - 14,511:83 , State Bank Circulation ' - ........„ 23,054 00 •DlscouncEuchange and Interest • • 24.153 84 . Profit and Lois , , • 503 413 Discremoice in cash- - • ' . - . • . 7.22 . . . , . . . - • - • - . _._51.61.5... 1 58.10 . , . -True and correct. • ' CHARLES L0.0.E.13, Clishigr. Affirmed -and subscribed before me this 6th day (4.; J 07,1867.. - . SAMUEL CHRISILUNT. J. P...... - -. ~. •• NEW ST - ORE undersigned has talon • the stand in Mal sat: J. tango street above Centre • street, adjoining InsOrance office of T. A. -Godfrey, Esq., and will open on Saturday, July 13th.. 1867, a floe; assotTr ; ment OUGoods, comprising in. part - the following:‘,l loar.-:-Superlor Family Flour 1n .10, ms andbbl*. Corn Meal in package!. 111ams:--riae ,Cataluised Strat , Cured Hams. Markerel,'Plckled Salmon, No: 1 Shore Mackerel, : Smoked , Salmon, Salt . ' dines. boxes,.do. 3i boxes. Plekle.,—Assotted' , English, Pints and quarts; dasorted,,American, Gallons and Gallons. Tomato - Cattinly..; 011. qt.& and }lf pts.. 011 of Nice, Pte.,. Gelatine. Allsettefr damp& Worcestershire Sauce, LucknOw Eratice.Assort ed Sauces. English Salt, Tomatoes. ' Green: Cern, As sorted..Telllcs, Prunes, Dartutmldastard, lba. and 1 lb.. Prepared Mustard, Coleraa Ira Mustard. - Cayenne Pepper, White Pepper, Table Salt, Corn Starch; Silver Gloss Starch, Boston Better Crackers, ike., Ac. • Determined to keep nothing but the VERY. BEST at RILASONeIaLE PRICES, he feels confident of giving entire aatisfaction, and solicits--the patronage of the public. Very Respectfally, JNO. July 13, .6T • • BALDWIN. LOCOMOTIV E WORKS. , , M• 11 A . / RID & C 11 PA.N Y. Broad i. and Hainllton :street& Philadelphia, Penna., 'Would call the 'attention 'of Railroad ..,_ .. Manager& and those interested in Ralf- . awl road Poperty, to their system of Loco-„..,, lift 13 41 R motive Engines, in which they are adapt- -., in . , i rlag ea to the particular business for w ~h ich .... they =Fe required : by the use of one, two, three or four of driving wheela ; and the use of the whole,. or sointich Of the weight 103 , may be desirable for ad -05 hes 11.1* and in accommodating :them to the strength ot enperstruction;. and rail anorZt no: - By these means the maximum useful effect , o the power is secured • with the least expense for at. tendauce; cost of fael, and repairato Road and Engine. With these objects in view, and se the result of twenty-. three years practical expermuce in the business by, our senior partner, we manufacture five different kinds. of Engines, and several classes 'of sizes of each 'kind:— Particular attention paid le the strength of the In/l.' chine in the plan and workmanship ' of all . the details.. Our long experience and opportunities of obtaining in-. formation, enables us to offer these engines-with the* assurance that in efficiency, economy and durability,', they will compare favorably with those of any other kind in use. We also furnish to order, wheels, axles, howling or low moor tire Gott centres without he composition castings for bearings of . every description, of Copper, Sheet Iron and Boiler Works ; and every art tide appertainthg to the repay or renewal of I.4xxunc, MveEngines. • - • SCRAPED, '.. - . GEO. BURNHAM; . `J an 1, ` . 64 —l-tf .. GELS T. - PARRY.; ; . , .. JOHN BINDLE.Y , "; - • TAX COLLECTOR,. Will'collect claim,' of all kinda with promptitude, and at Ter./lovable. charges. - Can be seen at Union Hotel any evening hi week. • June 29, 'or • . . • .26 at!. 131,• . ..., . . 11011E1H0YA,16. ,. .. • . . . . . ' ' (3 - . W.. BECK .• - - Having removed .- from the store corner Market and Second streets, to the store between 0: Dobson% and J. G. Brown's on Centre street. offers a large and va ried assortment of dry goods and groceries state low est cash prices. Being thankful . for past ftworsi still so belts a continuance of thesame: July 7.; 916 - - .27.tf D R...Clll B„ A r if ie l ol S an il a . r e b tr y AlL, sicia . - AUBURN, SCHUYLIKIII couNTY, TERNA. : Having had abundan experience in Straomay, - per. tinier attention paid to Surgical - cases of all kinds. Office nearly oppoeite the Depot - • April 18; •67 . 115-3 m• THE MUSICAL ...SCALE By Horace Paddle. With 13 fall page It - I aatrationo. Cloth. at . 23- . • This is an admtrab:e treatise on the origin and 'con struction of the Scales In common use. It is a work In which is di*played an uncommon power of analysis. , and that Will furnish many new - Ideas to accomplished musicians, and interest all who bare any knowledge of music Mailed. postpaid on receipt of price.' (MI— VERDITSON & CO.. Publlsliera Boston. CHAS. H. DITSON & CO., Tit Broadway. N Y. . - CARD.. • THE UNDERSIGNED, . • HODSOPATHIC PHYSICIAN,. Would respectfully inform his friends and the public of PottAville and vicinity, that he ban located per. numentlY, and opened an office at the corner of Market and Second streets. l'ottaville, Pa., where be can be proles/11=0y consulted. • . • • Oviroz Bonsai-7 to 10, A.ll ;1 to 2.. P. M.; . 4 to 9, March 16, 6T P. X.. .. • . B. DECKER, H. D.- . , . 1 11.4 en • He' Rakes, Grim Scyth&L es and Spathes Grain • Cradles. every kind and description, at. BRIGHT & CC'S Hardware Store, Centre street, Pottsville. 23 MUSICAL BOXES Large end small sizes, playing froin 2 to 15 airs, and costing from $5 to $.300.. Our assortment comprises Roth choice melodies as . . "Hos; Swarr 'fins Law Ron or Stumm. . . Su= LaseSrar.l . . "Brae SPADIGLED Barnres." • *f My OLD Xertsvaer Homr,o.etc., etc., • Besides beautiful eclectic= from the varietal Imported direct, and for aste at moderate prices, FARR..&• Importers of Watches, No. 324 Chestnut St.. below 4th April Y 7. •67 . • . • . lnct CliTit P E V: e. B, read for use.-1; 0 steam cylinder, . pole 6 , Inch diameter . and 2 feet . , Two tz:iceinkf moms. • . • .9ne 60-horse . poM BOY & SON, Pott sv ille Iron Worim. • • . • • 2if • Fresit: Frisks 1 !,—lf you .would have delicious - fresh pearbes in mid winter, buy some of our ex oellent Fruit Jan, and a sample or trait that tab been put eoD In one of for Ave _years., Also the Hero and .dare, both. , *7 good, and Fisher's Ttn Cans lasttinurt..be t b est,' requirut no soldering, but can be fastened as easily es glass at • Jane 1-22- - LEWISC. THOMPSON & CO.. YattemitCllerrY Illunatr.-.7dat 'aiming In ser . son; and an , article that every family 'Mould have- It will seed two brishels of, e • -beti in as boar. and do It better than an be done by band.: Fre sale singly or by thei dozen at • LEWIS°. 'rHOINILPSON & WA. Jane ' GEORGE W. SLATER, Real .Eata . te AO; ai r Conveyancei, - .owilvic—T., Hall Sialldiaig, 9d SWIM •:-POTTICPUI. I 4Pd , Tiocies, tote, Lards, at., bought. told.• and r ent e a. - Attention paid to the tetereshi landowttere. •Deeda • Bold% .11.0145164 *Mile Ohigretzolidy axs. =Mew . . AND. To L1.4.1T. Oil .. . . . . -RALE' *lt sir 'c HE AP..4. Portable' . e: .StNerri Engine.' 12-borte ' power. . to wood worblat ,cotellttm.... apply , JAB= •eP ABM. --. • PotwrePle, Ttily-12...er - . •.. ...24.21. 6 '. ' E' tatiliiT';.-4 Eitnre'Room an' d ler . ening -. lbeuie enitailroed htriet . mar Market &met ,Pititto-tille. willbe rented either together or repuntel v., "An to H. . BMW,. At Hand.. or-Kr. BOSEBER• ityntir iii ~Poiteville... . ..-- . . anly it, "nr—V-St " - . . in tiff ffA.TIC MALE.-..Ttie subscriber offers for I. sale at hi residenes- in Cali TclunshiP; 'the fol k=al property., viz : 2 Canadian PWea; "4 . llorsta itind3 striati.., !be- poutica7 tars apply to .7so. R. DAVIS, Cass Township. F 0 11: property - of Deo., Wooley on Third street, in the .Boroagh of Potturfileti apcshopie of cwo,..Double,lemme -Manes, and one Double Frame/1002.00bn rear of lot prop erty on. Third St. Terms and conditions made known by • • JAMES WOOLEY. New Philadelphia:: orby 4IDOBOE W004710n the pre miens.; •Cf ' • : ITAI;11:41kLieIIIVILBS STAND mAsur PILOP,ERTY FOR .11ff The, undersigned offers at ixtrateaale the well pawn' Basle property . known . as ~Princeton' . Basin. on the Delaware and Raritan Canid.,.ecosisting of nearly else acres, together with extends° coal and lent:ler yards and sheds.: To parties wishing to engage in the coat -and- lumber Dimino.. the above. pioperty, offers in. ducements not often' to bemet 'with. arra sertheasy busitteed le transacted beret . bet g of ¢ral 'position between Trenton and New Brunswick; claire country trade senses here; The property is in good repair.— The wharfage and rent of that part which Is not occu pied to carry on , the business, will nearly pay the 'in terest on the cost orthe property. Baring been clue. .Is confined tobsainesvior t. n years Psidp•it is my de etra It._ es there ; lrmo necessity for my carrying it e onkaiser,' is my reason' for offering It for sale. Terme will Le made accommodating. and possetekstxtren at:any time: Parties - desiring any Amber Information can obtain Why addressing' me at Princeton, N.J.; or by. calling; upon 'me at Princeton ' T . Princeton, June 1Q 'Bt ' - E`oll BALE The snbieriber wilt sell at prWate _r one . act of MERCHANT BAR LEON NOLLS, to make as follows: • ' Rounds from;( to ag inches..- Pquaras from % to k inches. , Plats from lk to IX by .1X to ako, with all the wereary housings, spladkw,•pinions. churls. dro-. . complete. • • - • - Alm, one or two setts ot. PUDDLE- ROLLS. - with housings. pinions. dtc., complete, to make a„. 5 and 6 inch pu bate. • , Also, one.OTARY SQUEEZER,: built on the Read ing ItonCompany's pattern, snitable for bar iron rol ling mill. . , • ••. Also, one CROCODILE • SQ,BEKLEP.„• with bed. plates, and all'complete. • _ •, One 75 horse .steam engine. in-excellent order. ma •king with all the above. a Merchant Barlron Rolling MDI compete, all of .which will be sold low for.csab, or in exchange for other goodproperty. • Apply to • • ATKINS BROS., Puttroille.,Pa. . • Pottsville, June 8.1567. .• ! 2.3.5 t . MO ILIET.—Tbe MANCHESTER COAL COMPA • 1: Nye-coLugßy at Wadeeville, new, In good condition.' Apply to P. W. EIIiSAPER. ' * nrioaeer of Mine& Pottirille, March 23, Mat • . • 12-tf VA ' FOIL MAGIC Farm OD the Schap.- kW and Sasqqehanns Railroad, Ave miles east. of .l'inegmve.: for , sale. including stook, Implements, grain, bay. &c.—about 200 acres, bait under cultpra 'don. lies favieiible.'-• Fries low, , aed terms easy: Address "FARM," lamas. Journal Office, March 9,'87 • 2-tt; - PORRENTAn of corner. of Centre and Market street!. .• also; one on Market street, roar doors from Cestra.. Bothllght and convenient. Apply to LHWIS O. THOMPSON & CO. Feb'. 23, !CT FOB SALT.-The Edit Church on Mar. ket street, : Pceneasion given, April Ist, .ft For terms, apply to - Feb. SS, 'GT LEWIS 0. THOMPSON gc CO To LET.—The . Office . now occupied by Muria Bins. In Rawls' Office Building, 3d floor. Pos session given April Ist. • Apply to - • O. RUSSEL, ed and Mahantonge Ste; Feb 23..61 • • - ' ' Elstf :Mt OWN I.OTEI IFOIII.- SALE in' the Maor i moth Vein Coal Company's Addition to the 130 - ough of St-Clair, Schuylkill County, Penns; Them lota are located on theMlll Creek and itre-converdent to all the Mill Creek Collieries and to the celebrated - filackiland Irma Ore Vein, which Is now tally devel: oped at the Shaft °PR. 'W. McOinnes, on the MAlD moth Vein Coal Co.ro land, and is said by competent Alps; Labe the best Imp • Ore yet discovered in the State. No doubt extensive 'Furnaces. Rolling Millet and Steel Works Will shortly be erected. on the proper .ty. The Mill Creek and Mine Rill Railroad paves through the property, giving facilities and convenienc es for all kinds of husWms. A. For terms, &c., apply to HART, President,. Nor. 430 Library Si, Philadelphia, - or to JOAN Sur ZINGER, Seery, St:Clair. Jan 12, 437 . - 24/ Vole 19.11.1. R OR TO LEANS:—A: tract of land situate half, a mile west - of Llewellyn, in -Branch and Reilly townships, Schuylkill county, con taining 4110 acres, having a Irm of three-fourths of a mile on the following veins, viz: The Gate Veins, Bel .kixtt, Black Mine, Tunnel, Faust and Salem. Parties wishing to JOSHU nurchase or to lease will make P appllaktion _ • A IWW, • . • 11,656 9T 13.979. Ti 4,095 44 - _RICHARD SIEETHURST. 3; DUNDAS LIPPINCOTT. • Rieeetors of tbo Estate of James Deeds& deceased, . . at 121 Walnut St., Or to CHARLES M. HILL, Rog Estate Aim, Pottsville. Aturast . 88-tf • • UB MALE.—The dwelling recently occupied 1: by John S. Graham in Morrie Addition.— 44 Possession given immediately. Address 'PRANK CARTE% ' 4l ;ta Real Rotate Agent, Mahan City, - Penna. April 21 E 18 104 Azinais Low OF 17 IFINII*0 NAOMI. NE.111.11 at DIALTEBKALI4 FOB BALE. Steam Engines of the following dimensions and pOwer: One 15 inch cylinder,' 72 inch stroke, 60 horse power. One 14 " " 48 " " 40 " 19,994 00 One 8%.. One 8 i• One 8 L. One 4 ...• 10 .. s. 4 .. One 8' . 4. vertical 12 " .. .8 One 10 horse power Steam Engine with Boilers and Fire Fronts, Grate Bars and Binder Plates, Force Pumps and Valves, all complete. • • Twenty-Ave Steam Boilers of different sines, via : 4 second-hand Boilers, 48 inch diameter, 22 feet long 66 1 4' . 24 " " 12 " I, new - 'B4-u 28 " 3 4 ti Si .111' so- II - as so "f2 . Bliiraterßoilers with valves, the., for hoisting water *t of le slope or shaft one 14 inch role Pomp com-* ~ p lf3 t e e v ea nn d b ot iOt y Adm a n o ‘kle ei n4 c gutis pedestals: fkßoller iron Smoke Stacks of the following sizes. via; Oitii Smoke Stack, 80 inches diameter. 86 feet long. Two, • " "- 84 • " • " 26 "• " . 1 Vetilating Ribaust ran 9 foot diatheter. 2 Dimple' Patent . B • 2 sett Breaker Rolls, wrought iron shafts, Wrightco Iron Shalt 9 Mabee diameter, 15 feat One 20 loot-Hoisting Drum, all annplete. A lot of 6 Inch Pump Pipes .with Singes. A lot of 3 inch Hoboy Water Pipes, .. • A lot . . 6 ' ••• - Also about &flans of SlOpe Chain of various sizes ono I ton portable Platform Scale: one 'Lever Punch • for boiler or screen work; a lot of Chain, Wire Rope and Belt Pelleys; a lot' of I. 2 and 3 Sheave Tackle, Blocks.. Also a lot of Sehnte Gates s • Slides end Dist: .Screens. ' • ' Also a set of Cone Gearing.ith -shafts, levers, all complete. It has not been used, and would be suit able for hoisting dirt at a colliery. Also a variety of other machinery* and parts of machinery imitable for coal mines at the . Depot, on Coal street, MEM A et dot Railhead 'lrmo. jj4:3‘end -2116"•fer;alifebeip. - i . _BRiciata Col . 11613,260 h - TT 111711101K5.-LIMING 'MUMAir AND LAigigirlt.B.-:;Ther subsedber; is noW Asrenared to rniiMtfentilre to order all kinds of Oak Lumb er at short tiotk3K - '•Drift Nis of band 5)( feet length 'al waYs on hand . Also:Fence Poets..: , All kinds of-Prep Timber ‘* . liiditt. Orders respectfully solicited; - '•• - PAUL BOCK, New Ringgold P. .T:7111y:114.11—)9•Sm ' - Sebnylkin Co.. Ps, • L asirenrig sir irks of three. diffnrent patterns ton unloading and stacking Ton ma unload. tot Win ten minutes with ease, Also rope and blocks for at- • - June 1-22- .' LEwit3.6:Titomi.sol Oakuin. Pitch,..Tar, Paints. Spikes, and bost.bolld ere,materials and tools generally, at lowest man atseturer's prices, - at • . . . • Sttlt/HT & 001. June-Et , ar. sts. illTaterVooleri,l7;eatitlful aid durable, in sizes TY 23- at BRIGHT & 00%, Pot:trillle. Gitrairdym Injectors are kept on hand at • BRIGHT do COl3. Pottinrille THE ART OF 0 unTIiGDRESSES. DRESS TEIMNING, EMBROIDERY, ice, iflßSc lIIITTCHINSON. Second Street. below Market. Pottsville.' respectfully Informs the ladles of Pottsville and vicinity. desirous oftearning the art of cut ting Dreams, Basques, Sacnnes. Jackets, Gored Dreg. as, - Wrappers, Chitdrenw and all new styles of Street and House Garments, that she has for sale Mnr..H. M. Carpenters L ately Improved Models, now. extensively need by. the ' moat fashionable drew-makers. Two hours' instruction will enable any lady -to cut and At dresses eqaalto a dress-maker. • • . . • Mrs. Hutchinson has on band a choice assortment of zephyrs wools and yarns ; zephyr. pattern canvas ; milk, worsted and cotton coat and dress buttons, Trim mings and Notions, 'Magic and Coventry Ruffling:, Tape. Trimming, Gold and Silver . Braid and Beads; Hair Braids in Silk, Linen. 'Cotton and Mohair: Ern braider), and Sewing Silk, and Silk Braids ; Knitting, Crochet. Afgtum, and Zephyr Needles Linen, Floes 'and Crochet Thread and Braid; French Working and Marking Cotton; Stamped Goods. fur Braiding and Embroidery. , rt. - Embroidery; Machine Stitching.. Plain Sewing 'and Stamping done promptly to order. . as - Mrs. H. has on hand a choice assortment of ele put Braiding and Embroidery designs for Ladles' and Children's dresses, to which she invitee! attention. • April 27, ' c7 . 174 je mill lot of Rye Flour on band R and for eale cheap by CHAS. B: BECK, • July 6-27. 16 Centre St., Korth' Addition: Rye Chop: Bye Chop f :—"Several tone on hand and for bale cheap by the quantity. .. ...CHAS. IL BECK, 18 Centre St., Mortis. Addition. July 6.-2 t 33 CD - cr cz• 30 TSB AND. CUT FLOWERS FOR BALE AT GREENWOOD NUBSEBY July 2T, 1887. $lOO. AGENTS WANTED. $lOO. MALE AND WEINAL.D. • To introduce a new and. useful 'invention of absolute utility In every household. Only Three Dollars Capital realised. For mrtienlam. address with , stamp; - JOHN S. WILSON . 4 Co., July 0, 4lT'2l`3m". ' asa Arch St.. maids,: Ps: JEST - ,1 1 11131.119111131,--BEIIIIEMEWS STEEL PROCEBB.—A Pamphlet on the bfamitactare of Idanotable Cast Steel, its and employment, by Henry Beeeemer, with tllnatrations of machinery need Price 25 cents. dent on receipt of 25 ands by mall , free. For ale try • - BANNA22 &RAMEY. %Weill& SAVE TSB PAIPEIL 3 Ceuta a pound paid for elesn.Whlte m. , --and also OldNewspapers,PamOlets, 11= Bo with the einem taken off.- Colored Pa ver 1 cent 'a pound. RANNAN & %WSW Meets, are you oppressed . with .anliety for your little ones! Are. your slumbers and hearts broken by their cries!. Do, you awake in the morning ante trashed and apprehensive! If so, procure at once a bottle of Dr. Leonwlntant 'Remedy and-yon will have no more Weary hums of watching and Anxiety. . ' DILLBONS . INFANT: REMEDY ball stood the teat' of years. Thousands of nurses and 'mothers hes:witness that it never 'albs there relief it used in Smarm . It is a mild. yet surwand speedy_ cure for Colic, Crantheand Windy - Pains. and is sable for all complaints incident to Teething. . Bold by.Drriggirde th roughout the Upited !Rehm— /Wren all orders to . • mizatirglir 811111T111 - Bois raenarroiii. • 137 North Third airees. Pitiadelrril i a. • March 11; • Mit'46-111 rum! out.: othi:-:•ccia. While, Laid,' Speim, Lnbriastbnr,.. 42 price and kinds. SS- - - BRIGHT I CO., Pottsville. Late if 14411euillt Salt Sty Ha , openedanew timer, - .Store; with a diotes lot of Coffee. TeCiktitar. Floor, Molasses. White Hooey. Bader, ateete,Yrulte Sams, — Mackerel. 011. gait Irivegarr 111001 1 004 - 44,1 at MOWN, Street. POP TIP," " : • • ini. l9 l ITw B 0 ". 10 4. II 841 It .1 10 II St " 24 " " 41 • so It St g 4 66 66 24 u JABEZ SN'ABICS. 21-tt GOOD NEWS FOR MOTHERS 1 GEO. W. CROSLAND, rostonipt. THE LATEST NEWS, Saparday, July 13. lmo2. The laillhan War-The Recent; true tioa Act extrelitsiat the !Mien. War. acrording'to esti. mattemade'itileeneral,Grantul bee quarters, are (ul ly WO traiol4l,lll4Ml a week, - paya s Washington dis.- patch to the tAdvertiser. The same. authority gawkiest. it Is determined to Inaugurate a vigorc us campaign. expendlturewwill coon be needed th meet the ' wants of - the increased force of. about dve mllltore per week. Thus far since the trouble began, every Indian killed has out tbe.Goveniment one million dollars and the lives of about ten white men. • ' • The Indite* made a aeocusl attack on Fat Waihm, -on the itith nit.. .Mktg eight soldiers; and killing or capturing 20 hones. The Indians • carried off their dead and wounded, and It is believed their 10.8 war large An.intluentid Cele) ene Mier PiPOTted • The meeting of the Roust on Thursday night, to re. 'noire and act upon the Senate% . amendatory Recnn.. enaction bill, was with a wish to facilitate final action un that subject so that the bill, in the form it may be agreed to by. oth branches, can be sent to the best. dent this week. It seem!' to be the general at de:stand. lug that he will return- It with his objections, to the House, in which It originated. as soon maybe veto mes. sage can be prepared, probably by Tuesday next.— Nearly all the.members are anxious to adjown. An extensive conapiranyagsdnst the life of the Queen of Spain Is reputed 'to have been discovered, and near ly two thousand pers, one are said to have been arrested. .Gar 4 baldi his Issued a manifesto declaring that h . .. 4 • aorta - and friends will fig ht Lir the liberty of Rome. General Barksdale. lll-esissippl. bas written a let ter - ranging himself;, alongside , ct, Longatreet anti . Fulton Coal Company announces - a. dividend of per cent., payable on the 11th Instant. • • The Germane In Richmond, Va., met and orgardzed ' a Republican club On Thursday evening. ' - The stock market less doll in Pittladelchis on Thurs. day. but prices were steady. In limn there was morn doing, and the better brands advanced telly c. eta per barrel. Wheat was in demand at an advance. Corn and oats were also ln . damsnd at an advance of 2 eel LI. ' NH offlcevf ;be Lehigh Coal and Navige— tion Company, at Whitehaveo, Pa., was rrrh_, bed on Tuesday night of $35,000. $5OOO re= ward is offered • for the arrest of •the tbievts find recovery of the nioney, , • Increase of Steel ittanu'reeture in Great . Birrqrstai by the Restresurr Prover... • Wo have noticed in recent numbers of oarEng engineeting and scientific exchangete; repest;, ed mention and descriptions of soine of the' st • b. lishments which are growing' up iu Bugle - rid for the manufacture of steel by the I:lease/nee prco and ire astounded at the wonderful energs. and '- vigor with which such enterprise:into pushed for ward, on a scale of it a ;ramie anda disregard-of expense which-would terusst'paralyze an oper.:tor of ordinary calibre. e learn teat in opts place in Lancashire, not, long since entirely unknown beyond the immedia t o looslity, excepting for au old monastic ruin, c.l:- ed , .2ourstesa Abbey—and where until a few sear~ . figo,apepulaticu nu:labeling only a few hundreds were slowly . working the mines of iron iu the vicinity—there has sprung into existence, in teven years, an active, bustling, thriving ancient! rapid ly growing town of over twenty thousand people ; and Barrow-in-Farness bids fair, apparently. ti. ' rival in prosperous industry and rapid rise, Huy . the cities of our own teeming, exlieustires Wes t. .• The following extracts will snow, that while we ourselves's:a rapidly going ahead, that we nin,t not fall into the - delnemn of imagining that rise. . whore the wertles sluggishly standing still, if not actually . going back: . ".5 town ut. spout 2VOO inhabitants, grown up from . s village of scarcely one tenth that popula. • . tion In the - short space of seveti Tears, is an ma cula in European geography. there have been instances before this of quickly.grown towns iu . some of the iron district's of Val:land, such as Middleetecro-on4'eee or Merthyr Tydvit, but theeo precedents earrhaedly benompafed, as regards rapidity and extent of rise, to the recently corn- - menced and stilt continuing increase of Ilsrrow in-Funiese. The appearance of this now hoper- • tent town has a stoking peculiarity. Itakreets of newly-built houses, and others in course erection; its gangs of busy workmen engaged iu building •, the bustling noise and the visible ten dency which exists everywhere to proct as Welt the Tamest apee-1; bear some reeembettia, to rho hasty preparations for porno enormous fur ot other extraordinary occasion." AP a • "The summon to which, in the first it stance, the rapid - rise of Ba'rrow-in-Puroi,z, been duo, is the erection of blast furnaces our Ito spot for the production of pig iron front the red hematite , ore belonging to the district never Bar - row.andl7lveretone, aud further north of both towns. The- ironstone mir.es there have beeit worked for some considerable time, and ore w. 1.4 carried by-rail .and by sea to the coal districts or '- Lancashire,. to the Staffordshire blast furnaces and to Walei, It was under such cirenmatanees that Messrs. Schneider; Hannay & Co., corn - menced the erection of some bidet furnaces at . Barrow in 1859, at the end of which year the that furnace was set in operation. • The excellent con • etruction and arrangement of their furnaces.; tho convenient and well-selected situate cloie to Hie sea *shore, and within a short" distance of the. mines;the advantage of obtaining coke and coal as ' return -freight from the places to which hematite ore was carried, were some of the 11(16st important elements which enabled Messrs. Schneider, Han nay & Co., to work their furnaces with extraordi- - nary economy and with consequent commercial success. . - "But thereyras another cause still more deci sive and important to the prospect of Meters. Schneider's furnaces, and for the prosperity ot the mining districts surrounding them, mud that was the-adoption of the Bessemer process. 'So' sooner had Mr. Bessemer's great invention got into practical use, than there arose an almost uulinait- . . ed demand for pure hematite iron. Messrs. Schneider, Hannay & Co.,.added one blast far-. 'nave after another to-their prosperousostablieh men tin rapid succession. In 1860 they had four, in 1862 seven' and in 1866 ten blest furnaces in operation; and after this, having transferred their works to the Barrow Hematite Steel Company, 'this establisment has beeh further enlarged, and has now eleven blast furnaces completed, and, in connection, with these, comprises ono of the lar gest Bessemer Steel Works in the world, although , they have as yet scarcely acquired half thew in tended size, and when convicted in accordance with the plans on which -ther.have_been com menced; will far exceed in extent and productive power any steel works now inexistence. Summing up these discursive'streets,' we 'scarcely know how to put in brier the. catalogue • and description of means and appliances, toward the one great end of -steel making .on thin enor .mortely extdnded scale. Steam-engines for ono purpose - or another, for, rolling, for forging, for blowing, for working cranes, elevator.' and in clines, are mentioned• in numbers which; wero they otherwise than in keeping with the rest ( f the picture, would he almost more than even we -coulcl believe. Then it appears the boilers aro "heated by-the similes gee from the furnaces," -and so the fc.rces of nature are presecd by eciente into the service of [hearts. The reader may bear with him the following few condensed facts in this connection. The Barrow-in-Farness Works have in operation-twenty-four steam-engines, and cen, same of coal, ore, lime, &d, twelve thouseud tons weekly; commute, also, all the waste gases front the blast furnaces.. Taking at the ,rate of one toll of material , every minutes, every 2-1 hour.', the production exceeds 5,000 tone per week. There , is always 'Preserve of some 40,000 tons of coal, ha. case Of any interrupted supply from any cause. They have become, in lees than seven years, the centre of a railway system whine feeds this one manufacture, and djetributes the minerarpro ducts of the region to other manufacturinglocal! hies. They are producing at the rate of ono quarter of a million tone of iron and steel annually and to meet the requirenieuttfof this rapidly-growing. production; the company have already created ict .the spot a shipping pert,- which will accommo date ships of 1,500 tone burthen, at the, does owned by the Aompany. We present these lgiet extracts as eminently . noteworthy, and may, xt eorao Intern time,. giro farther details of an .undertaking which la no eel to ego rnm riOnbt destined to produce very important result% erce both,of Great Britain and Ibis cOnritry.le will at present merely sny that the Barrow erectile Neel Cornpoky , matinfactnro steel rail, tyres, :whet:', axles, shafting, boiler • plates, duo., &c. and that the qnality sr/ tatis- Saatoryltatt the' demand is alw shred of the supply. Ealirinel companies, ant cohere interest ed, will amine Znich reliable int trmation, as to quality and pricea,pin 'tine to Mosem..Chae. Congreve & Son, lot 414 Li 106 Tohn atrek, Nem York, who are agents for :he company the UnitedSrates:—.Wali Street - _ ROTTSI7ILLE MARKET§.• Corrervell 4/isekly fOr the 7lritrernt..l.ollrnaf Wheat Flour, extra faintly, per barrel.. do do . do 'do par cwt.... do •do extra - per barrel.. do do superfine,- do Dye Floss, . do do per cwt..: Buckwheat Flour, • . do Wheat, prime white per bwihel do do katdo 'Dried Peachis, pared. ' pe Pound. dy do unnarre do Dried Apples,' di. . • glrel.. • 1 $1 50rEgg, • 36iButter, 30 3 , . 2 . Po Owen, ," 20 3 0o 'Lan], " IB 4 00IHagut, " ,13 • 1 Gsl.Sbonlders., "' I 40 ( Beer bind qr. ;1? 751 " front " • 9oll4atton, . 35 04) " 20 I 75 0 1 ° 0, - "113 EoiSugnr, Cuba, - ISagar" I 3 60. Port') Max, " I 115 , 12fte,- • , leru.shol. • IN. 0. Symp. " Rye, V bit. Corn,. Oats, " Soup beans" Peas, " Rye Ctkop„ Corn Meal •" " Potatoes, " Hg !Nare to cn i 4 Straw, V ton. Plaster, ". Salt, V each. Tim Seed, b. Clover's Sas " $1 40 1 20 ST 3 2 r.J 50 0 i 1 1 55 1 1 25 CLOSINC OUT.BUSINESS. • • • SELLING OFF TO CLOSE Being about to close out my present Mishima id Pottsville, I ,will sell out the entire et eg of Dry Goode, Groceries, Qneeneware, &c . £c., with sundry. fixtures and utensiltOn use belonging to the tame, all of which will be offered at great bargaina for the above P son . r. A. G LOVER. June 29. 437-26. 27M Centre M greet. • .THEODORE KLEIN, ILAXIMACTZEIi or • . Ana Wnolesaie and Beta - Dealer In GILT, W41111:1 & ROSEWOOD noULDisGs, Looking . .. Glass and -Picture Frames,. CENTRE BT., POTTSVII;LE,. sr emir, arc arenunes Immures 1703 e. 27 , 1 1. 0 :0n. Itegildkl7, done at the f..borie.t Notice. Sept 51..* • S'S-t f . One - Hundred Conde Songs. . • - One Hundred Irish Kong's.. • One Hundred Scotch Songi. The best collections publohed and enntalning even variety of stylo—old and new—ualque and rare—man, of them to be found in no other work,-wtth words ani music, complete. Three books. Price of curb, Board , 64 cts Paper, 50 cts. Sent pw , r-patd. OLIV 2 ER DIT SON .t CO ..Boston. C. LI. lIITSON Y.. June 22. '67 Cap . t.'o , . F. GLOVE,R.- - Having reMoved hia . Cfgar and Tobacco StOre t:' the baildingbetween Capt. Smith's clothing storeun -, J. Doerrsjewelrs More, Centre street, west tede, thankful to his friends and the public - for past %von. asks a continuance of.the same, and informs they the, he has on bandit' large and tmperior etc& of all coed it% his line which will be' sold at the lowest =stir( etere m swilll dfitingabhed by a large an . beautiful Model of a ship hla window. • • April ' ' 15-tf . • Large AssortuiOot of • . BOYS SPRING M303111E11 CLOTHING` irrai A:razsu sarrlr OT irszpren. •• -• • . • . • . ENGLISH. • • GEI3III4IN, • and • .•CI: AS' ERES • OF EVERY STYLE At • H. PASSER -& IlON 99isvt Clothisteeteirtli czEmistir.,rce,kaz.- • . Sqlf l / 4 , 1 1. • • ick • IA le LIC - IiZT . I. 1.73 1'01914 00. 7 00. - 7 - 50 i 10 551 11 25 0 30 ) • '7 50- '7 - I : 1 . - 4 8 L 4. -. 400 461. 3 40' 2 CS -2 30 2 , 40 .sO- .. 40 20 29 -1/ . .1: r.! 14 /14 1. 30