The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, August 10, 1867, Image 2

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    Xournal.
rtYI'TS V ILLE, PA.
AT trUD:tlllr. G Cf/ii 10, 1847.
• Be lug and fear not
,gr_
oes and t ruth' s the met
thouirn'st at be eh, eaueurrih
Gi
?I,ASIN PACTS FOR TAIL-PAY 1 3 03 6•
t should be borne in mind by every tax
•er of the Nation that the enormous burden
lebt under_ which the country is stagger
, was fixed upon it by a rebellion inaugn
ed, fostered and strengthened by the
,mocratic party.
f t should be borne in mind
and
is debt
.s enormously increased bythatch sid
.33fort given to the rebellion while In , pro
.as, by the Democratic party, whereby the
g e l s were encouraged to prolong the strug
against the Union armies,' after all other
loanable hope of success bad been extin
&bed.
It should be borne in mind that the debt of
e Nation was still farther increased by the
forts of the Democratic party to cripple and
istroy the public credit, in the midst of the
ruggle for stational existence,' and that the
atonal bonds were thereby forced to heavy
,count in contracting loans with which to
wry on the war, and the national currency
its thus largely reducedtalow its true value
.1 gold, thereby adding enormously to the
ost of all material purchased for the use of
he Government..
It should be borne in mind by every tax-
Ayer .of the Nation, that the Demotratic par
y stands pledged to secure compensation to
'he slaveholding rebels for every elave set,
ree by the Emancipation Proclamation and
2oustitutional Amendment, thus adding an
,mlnenae and unjust burden to the already
onerous, taxation under which the country
groans.
It should , be borne in mind, that all the
Democratic members in the House of the
Fortieth Congress, have placed. theinselves
upon record by their votes, in favor of the
monstrous proposition that the National gov
ernment is liable, under the'Reconstruction
laws, for every dollar of the State debts of all
the States in rebellion. -
It should be borne in mind by every tax
payer, that the Democratic party, through its
orators and writers for the press, is commit.
ted to the unheard of proposition that the
Confederate war debt, contracted in the ini
quitous struggle to overthrow the National
Government, is justly chargeable against the'
Government, and that this party -only waits
the success of its insidious attempts to regain
power, to fasten this debt upon the people of
the United States.
It should be borne in mind by every tax
payer, that the Democratic party has made I
persistent and strenuous efforts to injure both_'
public. - and private credit, and bring on a
financial crisis, such as will make it impossi
ble for the •Nation to meet its obligations
-promptly, thus carrying wide-spread rein
Varoughout the country, and reducing to beg
gary thousands of widows and orphans and
other worthy persons whose little all is . in
. vested in government bonds; for the redemp
tion of which the With of the Nation is
pledged.
It should be borne in mind by every tax
payer that the Democratic party penistently
opposes every effort made to lighten the-pub
lic burden, by levying duties upon foreign
imports, thus requiring foreign capitalists and
traders who have the benefit of our mark.ets
to bear a small share of our burden in return,
and at the same time protect our home menu.
lecturers from the deadly competition of
foreign capitalists who grow fat upon the pro
ceeds of pauper labor.
And finally, it should be borne in mind by
every tax-payer, and every patriot who has
- the good of the country at heart, that the
speakers of the - Democratic party openly ,
-avow that their hope for the success of , that
party lies - only in financial disaster to. the
country, whether caused by failure of crops,
by the discrediting of the national currency,
by preventing the Nation from meeting its
-obligations, or however resulting. •
'We earnestly hope that every Union paper
of Pennsylvania will keep these facts before
the people continually, until after the nest
eleciton shall have rebuked the iniquity of
the Democratic part} by the largest Repub
lican majority ever given in the State.
PROPOSED 4.1111A111 ‘6011)(11. Cosy ms-r ion
A Convention of all the teachers and the
friends of Sabbath schools is proposed to be
held in this County on the :17th of Nugust.—
The growing interest felt in the influence of
Sabbath schools, as one of the most power
ful means to improve and elevate the popu
lation of our County, will give great impor
tance to thisConventiOn. It promises to be
one of the largest and most enthusiastic
meetings conneeted with. Sabbath schools ev
er held in this County. Eminent and elo
quent speakers from Philadelphia and other
• parts of the State, are expected to be in at
tendance. ` • . • - • -
One of the attractions of the Convention it
is hoped, will be the attendance of Mr. Phil
lips, renowned not only as the author of
many' of . the sweetest Sabbath school raelo
. dies, hut as one of the most popular and ad
mired sin gers of his day.
Trtv tea-payers of the County are desirous
of knowing from -the Directors of the Poor,
who have not yet given any .explanation ,
what has become of the $lO,OOO drain by
said Directors from the County Treasury,
over and above the sum repOrted as having
been drawn up to May Ist, 1807. Will the
tax-payers ever receive any light on the sub
iect
Pot gyfitio.
'Weekly Almanac
arm' Atm • j a
1 67--Au gnat.. o , arm mom
lo
11 suNDLT
1.2 ?demur
T1M8DA.T.....
14 Wm:m=4T.
15 TIII7III3DAY
11 FntD►Y
lervrzonoLoGicta , TABLE
Atnth-T. isif
2 ..
4
cs
s
Ghat. Shaneyberger, an old German citizen of
Ashland, died ou the 2d instant.'
To•morrotc.—Thirty-second Sunday of thoyear,
and eighth .after Trinity. Day's lenith,l3 hours
and 59 minutes.
. OmudoLie ehrigntan can -hereafter he found at
the office of V. V.{:onrad, corner of Centre and
Market etreeta.
ifeleors,--took out for a shower of meteors this
evening. The 'November shower ie usually the
greatest, but there ie often - a grand show in Au
gust. .
Ruorl, Treasurer of Trinity Church,
givte notice that all deeds for lob; in Bit; Laurel
Cemetery, not taken up within three tnOntka, will
be tarfeit;sl •
On Thesday last the dead. body of an infant sae
found is a cees. - pool in Walnut street, Aehlatid,
The party guilty of the cruel act has not yet
' been discovered.
Titomas Kline,.of Tamaqua, working in 'a col
liery at Newkirk, had one -of his arms severely
crushed and was otherwise injured bfp, fall of
coal on Saturday last. _ • • .
- -
Mr. Leci 'C. Maud, who was 'severely injured
recently near 51ahanoy City, while on a tram,ln
consequence of hie bead coming in contact !tab
a bridge, is we are glad to state, recovering. . .
At stunting of the Board of Directors of the
First National Bank .of IttahauoT City, held on
Thursday that, E. S. Silliman,'Esq.,
until the next
=ma meeting of the stockholders.
.4.1 the recent commencement of Vashington
and Jefferson Collegei. held this year at Wash
iogton Pa., Rev. Mr. Moore of this Borough, de
livered two able and eloquent addressee. They
elicited the warmest praise from discerning, oral
cal minds. .
111:: Schalk, thei gunsmith of this 13orimgb, and
a noted shot, is in s.ttendarios at the second an
nual Schatzenfest of the Washington &brazen
Versin which commenced on 'Monday last. • The
festival is reported as being nnnsnally brilliant
thfryear.
rr. 7- )'s of Augult..—After. the -15th - inst. ,
the Government wilt pay Angnat Vaire to cash-
Parties desiring can have them exchanged for
540'd by pm/outing them before that date, to L.
F,'Whltuoy; Ceetre. etreeti
Petteeilio. •
Junot. ./21'se..a workman employed at the /No.!
flea Furci?p, yril a distance of thirty feet . on
All the beshise„ot Pottsville have conelw3ed
Very wisely, to keep theiF shops elmed on San-
nreo thousand dollars have so far been sub
scribed towards starting in this Borough a Union
Coopetative Aasociation, similar to that in exis
tence in St. Clair, and to which we referred in oar.
]set.. The project seems to meet with a favorable
reception at the bands of our workingmen.-
• _ _
- The Philadelphia. Preps of Wednesday, contains',
the following : •
• CharleilAged 24, * Witt train &WOO
(cunt, Was adni,Uedlo the'Perihisifaitit Hoeplfel
y Buffering from gunshot wounds, widen he
Bays he received at a disturbance In 'Montgomery coina•
• .
AccidentaUy-shot.-=or tab:Er darizst-ILE Lr: -
.Tobn.Hebert, residing in Sanderson street, this
Homigh,. r was atienapteng,to draw* loaded
S hoe
from e pe!tol he wanted to clean., the pistol weir
accidenWiv discharged and the load entered the
lower art ofhis face; producing a severe but not
mortal We:ma. . - _
Rec. Me. Protheroe, formerly of this Borough,
but now Rector of the'EpiactAnd Church at Corry,
Pe., is on .. a visit to - Cite friends here. ltir.
Protheine has a due field of operations in the oil
regions, and we do act doubt from his ability and.
earnestness in his sacred calling that he does
Much good among that people, • . •
.
Card.--On the 28th of .November, 18&1, I took an
Maumee of $lOOO on store and $2OO on fiunitnre of
F..lllahr, of Pottsville, for terra of one year.
The policy expired on the 28th. of November,
1865, of which 1- gave gr. Slibr notiee, and was
not renewed as my records will ahoW.
T. A GODYBEY.
There is very good road - between 'Pottsville and
kiabanoy City, via New Phdadelphia. It is about
three miles longer than the old road, via St. Clair,
now fenced in to gaard against accident from large
holes caused by mining operations Dear St. Clair.
We understand that the routefora new road
between this Borough and ftlahanoy City, has been
surveyed, and that it is not improbable work may
before long be commenced on it.
The °aunty Superintendent informs ns that the
provisions of the-new school law, to which we re
ferred in our last, making it obligatory on school
districts to have a census of the children taken,
to ascertain the manber , of children admissable
to the public schools, refers only to Philadelphia.
The interior of the BMW is not embraced in the
requirement, and no duty of the character stated
devolves upon school directors beyond the city
•
Proposed E.rourkion.—The Good Intent Steam
Fire Engine Company, No. 1, of this BOrongh,
contemplate =tang an exassion to their
some tim e next Sprang, taking with them
fine new' steamer. A comixatteehas been ap
pointed to make the preliminary arrangements.
The Company propose taking with them a com
mittee of citizens. We know no excursion this
efficient Company could make which wool(' be
more delightful.
_ -
the American Rose Company, one of our finest
and most effective fire companies, will have a plc.
nic at the Agricultural Park grounds on Weanea-.
day nest,l4th instant, The Company has a larger
membership than it can equip,
.and the fnnda de;
rived from the pic-tic will be devoted to obtaining
the needed etinipmente. The ladies' aro respect
fully Milted to be present on Wedneeday meta.
We trust that the affair will be a success..
The MinerstiUe Literary Association will con
tinue the debate on the. question "Which is the
greatest evil Intemperance or Slavery? oa next
Monday evening, in the Odd Mows' Hall, at 8
o'clock, precisely..
.This question la an interesting one, and from
the manner in which it was before dismissed, we
predict a lively as well as instructive debate next
Monday evening. •
Junior Sons of America.—The State Camp of
Pennsylvania will meet •in aiming seagon. at
Schuylkill Haven, on Tnesday next, 15th init.
The State Secretary, Henry J. Stager, of Phila
delphia, reports that this *Labe the largest meet
ing ever held by the Order. Delegates are ex
pected fromall parts of the State. -W. 0., - No.
47, of Schuylkill Haven, has made extensive ar
rangements for the accommodation, of delegates,
and the different railroad companies will haute ex.
cursion tiokets for said occasion. • •
Terrible Accident near New Oastle,—On the af
ternoon of the 2(1 inst., while Ellwood Oaktim,_
a ged 17 years. a laborer at the Colliery of nos'.
Litttansies it Brothers, near New Castle, was
tug a strap at the hoisting engine, his left 'arm
was caught by the machinery, and completely
torn from hie body. Several of his ribs were also
tan loose. Up to Tuesday last he was living, but
there were no hopes of his recovery. Ile is a son
of the late Danl. Oslo= of New Castle; and the
only support of a wiilowed mother.
•
• Independent 'Order of Good Tinplara.—The
following- officers of Anthracite Lodge
I. 0. of .0. T., of Pottsville, • were installed
liyD. G. W. C. T., J. J. Oaks; onTimrsday,
theist inst. . . .
P. W. O. T., ChM. L. Gillingham ; W. C. T.,
J. Morgan Maurer •, W. V. T., Miry E. Weiner ;
W. S. Wm. H. Robinson; W. T.; Eliza S. No
ble ; W. A: B„ Bettie Austin; W. P. B„ Joo.
T. Werner, Sr.; VT. 0., Francis W. 'Boyer ; W.
R.' H. S., Bus. H. Werner; W.L. H. B.,_Era
ma Hodgson ; W. 31. Harry Maginnes; W. D.
M., Mary Greasang W. L G., Robt. S. Chris
man; 0. G., Wm. Halberstadt.
5 5,7 5 • M.
5 6 : 4: First Q. 7 2 12 ev.
- 5
7:7 - 8 Full M. la 6. 41 mo.
67• - 11 Leel Q. ?.?. 4 26 •er.
5 9 7 0, New M.-49, 8 8 er
5 106 SS
5 _11.6 56
e sit . greenwood foi the WM-
17 A. NIL NOON r
eto ,
65 . 1 2
62 IS i 73 •
761• S 2
G2f. 76 . 79
'66 ,
:( '671 79 f C 6
TI e understand that Senator Wes.. M. Randall
recently went bail to the amount of iB5OO, for
John Delaney, Jeremiah Curran, John Royal, -
James Burgan, Henry Doaing and John Nash,-
who were arrested by, Marshal Reialor's . police.
and committed to Twison, charged with riot and •
Townsh i p.
'at the public house oMa Finley. in
Cass Township. The Senator f
evidrtein
ntly made a
'strategic move in this business. They willem
doubtedly, all be present , at the Copperhead Con
vention on the 19th inst., • as delegates, or lobby
ists. The contest is warm between the two wings
of the Sham Democracy, and every rote is impor
tant, The. Prison and the Poet' Rouse' are ex
pected to do their duty.
•
• "Oncimiber Time."—Conntry people have a pro
verb that "things are always dullin cucumber
time." In other words, cucumbers thrive only
when the nights are warm,. and just now vegeta
tide excellent daring a torrid spell, has every rea
son to laugh and to be happy.: The veriest slug
gard exultant could desire no duller time than we
are now experiencing. It ie, nevertheless, a cheer
ful rest, for in the abnndant crops and the pro
mises of cares in general, there is occasion for
anbstaritial hope in solid and healthy trade drir
leg the coming fail. Even the farmers are tak
ing a breathing spell: Their last sheaf of oats
has been garnered, and for - a few days they may
exult in that kin's of recreation afford:Al by huckle
berry tramps and camp meetings. "encumber
time" in the country means holiday time.
•
How to Mend Them—. An exchange says that`
torn notee of any mbe tten:lc:ended with-.
out guin than with itkind .
It y
gives ba a modus Operandi
as thus:
"After smoothing " out 'the ,edges, carefully
moisten the edges with the tip of the finger; af
ter'wetting on the tongue ; then lay the, bill on a
piece of writing paper, carehally drawing the
edges together, and lay another piens of 'writing
paper over. it. A few seconds' rubbing with' the
linger over the seam will make it adhere, and a
little adroitness, when it is dry, will enable per
son to lift the bill from the paper without tearing
it. The seam will, it is said, then loo.invisible,
and be the strongest part of • the, bill." . " -
.The idea is evident that the sizing from the
writing paper, being
. a cement of glue,. contains
all the adhesive matter required to unite, the sun
dered edges..'.
Base
. .
i.Ball:.—Last SatUrday afternoon, a match
game of •base ball was played . at • .Schuylkill
Haven, between - the Expert• Club of Itlinersville
and the Pottsville' Club, fort he championship ef
the County. It resulted in a victory for the latter,
by SI vane. . append the more-
POTTSVILLE. • ....SEFEET.'
.. R. • - . 0.8.
J. L. Foster. s. 3 713. Bear' 2
J. T. Sanderson, 9d b 3 . Fisher • 4
R. C. Broad, C. f.... 1 s,p. - Aristcy 1 6
J. Stlobter, p a S I G; Morgan .. .. :2 2
J. .Waters, s• • 5 s:l"..lderkle • • 4 1.,
G. Perri& 1. f • 6 2,E.• Lavenbnrg
Grossing. r. I.; 2 IJ. W 111111.1320 -• 9 8 •
K. Erdman, lat b.— 2 .7 1 C1. 5ear........;.. . 4. - 0
. Smith; 26 b 2 'Morgan ' -2 .1
innlno...lat 2d Bd. 411.1 NA Gal 1113 81.1 i 'Mb ,
Pottavllle.... 5 5. 21 6 3-2 .2 . 6-44'
E x p e rt -...:..4 2 0• 2 0 . 0 8 8.
Umpire—Captain Stltzez.Schnylhall Raven B. B. C.
Scorers—John hilltman,-Pottavillit ; C. Phillips, MI
-nersville;' •
This :afternoon 8, game * of -base ball will be
Played at Schuylkill Haven, betiveea theCressona
Base .Baliplub and,the Pottsville.
Alms-House Report—ThO regnlar monthly
meeting,cl i'ne Direntora of the POOT, Selanyl
km County, was held at the Alms-House Aug 5,
1867. Present; B. C. Jr:,Wilson, J. Orwig, and
B. T. Hughes.
The following is the census of the House for
the month onding July 31, 4867 ; -
No. of Inmates in the House June 30,'1866.. 349
" " July 81, 1867.. 341
Deerelo3e last month 8
No. of Inmates in the House Sob' 31, 18G6.. 418
" to the eamo time this year
• Decrease thie year.. . ...
Of the above, 64 are insane and idiotic ;.80 un
der.medical treatment; 68 children • •
. Admitted during the 'month, Died ischarged
and absconded 85 ; bound out, ; 6.
Lodging and meals' were furnished to. 167:per
sons. '
Out-door relief was granted to 64 persona
amounting to $279 00. • •
Bjlla were read, and orders were drawn, amount
ing to - . $7,309 07 ,
. Previous, issue • • 36,203 02
Total iu.1967
.
Practical Joker&—Two residents of Alshanoy
City have been •amusing_ themselves during the
'dimmer in playing practical
. jokes upon, arch
cther. The season closed last week with a huge
one. It seems that they staged out one day to
view the proposed route of the new turnpike be
tween lllahanoy City and this Borough. After
they had proceeded about a mile and a half, one
of them stumbled and fall with apparently, con;
siderable violence to the ground. . He declared
emphatically, that he believed be had broken one
of his legs. He rose, limped forwards short dis
tance and then at down, declaring that it was
impossible for him to • walk say further. No ve
hiole or other mode of transportation being at
hand, and his symptathislng friend being thor
oughly alarmed. he proposed to carry his suffer
ing /need to. Idahanoy on his back—no trifling -
tuadertaking,. as the sufferer weighs about one hun
dred and eighty pounds. However, he' struggled
along with his heavy burden, ' and ' when they
reached Illahanoy, the broken- legged man leaped
fmm the Good ffamiritan's back, and ran off con
vti'd with laughter at the practical joke he bad
so successfully played on his friend.. The viotim
took it good paturodly and promised the joker
halfa gallon of ale if he would eay nothing about
it. The latter however, enbeequently went on a
..gipree," and told the story much to the ammo
ment of the ffiahano'y citizens, who are well ac
quainted with both parties.
•
rotice Matters. -The umber of tunes made
by Bit - withal Heisler's police daring .Tnly, proximo,
waa ninety-three. He reports all quiet at the col
lieries, but considerable drinking going on. In
emis equeuce of thelminers being out of . employ-'
ment, many of them employ their
-spare time Art
this meaner.. . '
About a fornight * since police officer Peter 0.
Kreiger, while hating a prisoner in custody, was
shot at - near Col. H. .r,. Cake's colliery, Lois
Creek, Shenandoah Valley. The ball touched his
cheek and nose, inflicting slight ilestt wounds.
The perpetrator of the outrage was not dht
covered . ' , .
i On the 2d inst.,llfirshal Heisler received a des
{ patch from Malmsey City, giving infomation that '
on , the previous night .a party of " Bnekahote "
had entered the house of John Quigley, near St:
Illeholas, shot ' and heat him, . and , left
him for dead. The Marshal's police were
early on the ground, anti . made every exer- -
tion to .. obtain information which would lead.
to the arrest of the perpetrators, but 'solar
they have been unsuecessful, the people who
1 kr ow. being afraid to make any disclosures Impli-,
eating the ruffians. The cause of the murderous
assault is, briefly . ...Quigley had prosecuted some
men loran allegerlottence,and had them held to
bail for trial.; el. , Subsequently several of - the men'
called la !!k ;and desired bUn to .withdraw the
Bi g ...
,1,ir::•• be bdtter.for him to do
:i, • • brxibe . _ . : . of. thelat Mat.- they ,
6; 7 : Werance the faignrip--°ligic n White Star ei Tn ce ellidi rs were Y ev =l iti toae gißt rre
the 6'
the ensuing term Lodge, No, 228,
LO.of 0 ~ of St. Oak.
This Lodge was onlY instituted in November
last, anti Is now strong in nrinabers, Mid has been
the means of resoling many from the evil cruise
of thtemperance A. short time wince, a beautiful
banner was presented to White Star try the Ladies
of the Lodge, on. winch occasion Rev J. Linden
moth? of Port Carbon, made a very powerful and
effective &valves
W C T , George W Midas; NV 17. _T.,'Mies
Hattie vaiiii, NV, S , ..F Crasithaw , Yu. A
S , lriforYarmie Bone; F-8 , Alfred Sealery;
fil. T., William Short , W I. G., Mow ?loth &
Jones , W.O G , G. Maury Prosser; W. C.,Bev.
8 G Hare , P.W. C • T , tday , W. Evans ;W. M.,
M Kort W. D.M.. Mrs Eliza Evans .W.
11 II lc gm E A. Boone NV L B 8., ihlrs
Mary Irvin
The Projected steet Worica..=The ere
the Minutes of a meetingheld in Scianyikaliaa-.
yen. on Saturday_ evening last: .
- Setrunstu.Efsvirs, August B. VAT.
A meeting was held at Koon's 'Wotel in Schnyikill .
Etavelt, thli evening, for the purpose of receiving the
reports of.the'cenimittee in reference to the erection
of steel works in this County.
The minutes of the previous meeting was read and
. .
adCted:
•
Gideon Bast, Req., chairman, 'reported hiving -visit
ed Philadelphia for the purpose of solleiting . arlbscriP
tions from capltalials there, to the project., -but found
the gentlemen whom be dv , ired to see absent from the
city. Be was however, -in correspondema'wittice
parties who would Enbacrthe liberally. and if so the work
wonld be commenced at once. He also slated that be
bad letters from different parties, who offered' to sub
scribe largely to the project providing the works uld
-be located at points designated by them (Out ofthe
County.) He objected to going ont of the Otetz4, to
erect thetvorks and urged all who „Mt an Interest in
the affairs of Scheylkill County to 'mime forward and
assist in this work.
Mr. Clayton of Peeterille also spoke in favor id'
ated the
works being located in Sctuaylkill County sod st
that he bad used his besrendeavors to jutleore
of
e sub -
tveriptions to the project. ' Be hoped the peopl
would
Schuylkill county and of Schuylkill' Haven Lt
. crease their subscriptions..
- _
Major Jas. Wren of Pottsville, an d . Dr. IL H. C, oxe.
of t3citnylkill Haven , also urged upon the citizens of
ViebnYlkill County the necessity of hammed exertion.
in order to accomplish the desired object.
Mr. Core suggested that as money snelcient had
been nearly subscribed , they proceed this evening
to the organization of the Company. ,
tad that 1
2dx. Pliny who a rer of Schuylkill Haven sugges
each per.o... n felt an interest in the enterprise
should pledge themselves to raise a certain amount of
pledge and the work would then go on. He offered to
himself to raise five thousand dollars.
On motion it was agreed that every
~eubscriher be a
committee to solicit subscriptions Co the Preleet•
On motion the meeting adjourned to meet on next
Saturday , evening;l o th Inst., at 73‘o'clock. .
J. B. Thomas, Seeretsre• .
IThe electing to be held thin evening, will ha
all
"probability he very important, "as definite ac
tion' will very likely be taken. • It• should be large
ly attended. - •
Fire in Market Street.—On. 'Tuesday morning
last about '2 o'clock, flume were discovered lesn
ing from the two-story frame building on the
north side of Market Square, the property of the
estate of the late (len. James 'Nagle. The first
floor was occupied as a flour and feed:and gra- .
cery store by WW. K. Boltz, and the upper part as
shr and
a dwelling by Mr. Benj.-H.lllhr. lfir. - Ki
his family were absent at the time of the fire,
and the only. person sleeping in the house was
Philip Kiehl . , a saint of 'Air: Klahr, who made
a narrow escape from being suffocated. An alarm
was given, and the fire companies were soon' on
the ground with their steamers and hose car
riages. The plugs in the vicinity were not in
good working order,•and it was vane time before
water could be thrown on the fire. Another it
the firemen experienced was au inadequate
upply.of water in onsequence of the smallness
of the rnain.pipes. .This a serious difficulty in'
the upper part of Market street; and should be
remedied: - Steam fire engines can be of little use at
tires unless they have a full eupply of water. The
Connell should, aleo,.reqrdre -frequent inspections
of the fire plug's of the Borough, so that they can
be kept in perfect order. Thu firemen worked
faithfully and succeeded in confining the fire to the.
building, which was .partially destroyed. Mr.
Boltz's loss is 8298, which iseovered by insurance
in the Metropolitan Company. Mr, Mabee loss
it is difficult to estimate . ••• His property consisted
of valuable household furniture, of clothing, etc.,
worth at least $2c1)0.. It was entirely destroyed,
with all the clothing of the family. Unfortunate
ly there was no Maurine° on Isir.Klabr'e property,-
and his lose falls with peculiar severity upon him.
On the house there is an insurance of 8800 in the
.Lycoming Mutual Company, which will probably,
not cover the loss by about $BOO or $lOOO. The
fire it is thought, originated in the cellar, Init
'Whether by accident or design, is not positively
IMown. • •
.
The Borough Council should authorize the plac
ing on oneof the engine houses Of an alarm 'bell
of sonorous 'tone, to be sounded in case of fire.
Now, there are no adequate means of sounding a
general alarm properly,' and it is irnportant•that a.
large bell should be provided for that purpose.
We are requested on behalf of Mr. Beni. Illahr
to return his thanks to the Fire 'Department for
their ezertions to save his property from de.strpo
tion. ' Although , unfortunately, they were not
successful, he is grateful. for their unremit
ting efforts.' • .
-- • —
Death of Bonne/ .Huntrinoer, . —ln our
lass
we stated that Samuel Huntzinger, Esq., of
this. Borough, had been discovered on the morn
ing of the let 4net.; by a member of his family,
lying in his bed in a speechless state, he having
received daring the previous night a . stroke of
paralysis. He oontbaned in that condition until
Thursday morning last, wh en he expired at 9
o'clock . He was born near Orwigeburg in this
County, on the 20th Of .october, 180 d; was- the
eldest eon of Hon. Jacob Hnntzinger; . and at the
time of his death was in the 67th year of his age.
He was a highly estimable citizen, and daring his
life at various periods held positions of honor and
trust, the duties of which he invariably discharged
with marked honesty and fidelity. , Before Imbed
attained the age of .21 years he was clerk in the'
various offices of. Sheriff,- Prothonotary, Register
and - Recorder. In 1825, when be had reached his
25th .year, he was elected Sheriff of the County,
over older competilora At the expiration of his
term of office in 1828, he renioved.from Orwige
burg to Pottsville, and took an active . part
in developing the coal wealth of this. Re
.
lion, the trade being then in its extreme.
infancy. . He,' associated with the late Danl.
Kaercher, opened what was then known as the
Rainbow 'Colliery., in Crow Hollow,. (late Kirk-.A
Baum.) He also opened' mines on the Sharp
Mountain near this .Borongh, and on the Broad.
Mountain near New Castle. Owing to the preca
rious nature of the business at that time, be did
not 'succeed in any of his mining enterprises, but
great credit is due' him for having been one of the
indomitable pioneere in developing the vast min
eral wealth of this Region... In 11131-2, he was
elected to represent the people' of the County in
the Legialatnre, which he did very faithfully.' In
1833 be was appointed Register and Recorder,
under the old Constitntiorr, which °Maas he held
until the Spring Of 19.36. He their appointed
Steward of the Conty -Alms House. Under his
. administration - many valuableimprovements were
-introduced into that • Institution. - Be- held the
'position for several. years, to the satisfaction of
the people; whonhe resigned •it to enter into the
mercantile business in Pottsville. He continued
in that business for anumber of years: In 1854
he was elected Prothonotary of the Connty,:and
served for three years: Subeequently, from 1863
to 1800, he. Cle)k in the Brothonotary's Once
Mader Col. Jos. Eager.. -* • ' •
'ln all the relations of life he was an excellent
man; being a good husband, a, fond father, and a
faithful friend .' Hie death has east a deep • gloora
rover a -large circle of relatives,• friends and ac•
ipmintances. .
To-morrow afternoon his funeral will take place
from his late residence in Centre %tree. '• His re
mains Willbe interred, in Odd Pellows' Cemetern
attended to, the grave by Pulaski Lodge, No. 246,
A. Y. IC, et which he was. a charter member.
Ho will helmeted with Masonic. ceremonies.
• _
The Sabbath School . Teacheita' Union of 'Potts
ftret meeting •of this Itaseciation was
held the First Presbytertan Churelt,Mahan-:'
tongo stroet, August G, 186.7, - Stephen -Harris in.
the chair. 'Opened with prayer by Rev. J. 0.
Bocher. .lottn W. Becket, . froth the • Com!
• T oittee on Articles 'of 4ssociataoe, presented the
following which after some'discussion wore adop7
ted: ••
Weiss-as, Tne_prOveriti of the Sabbath School
cause depends in a great measure upon the.united ef
forts of.its friends, and the teacbtes of the Protestant.
Sabbath •Scliools of :this Borough feel - that thus far
they have been engaged in their several schools' with
out that unity of action essential to the success :of ev;-
erg undertaking; and -are convinced that the COMM=
cause in which they are engaged and for Which they.eo
emnestillabor, can be greatly advanced and a (rater-'
Ind feeling among them cultivated by such union, they
have, therefore; organized themselves for the. further
ance of these objects, and adopted for their govommeut
the following A.rticles of Aesochttion. - •
The name of this organization shall be the Sab
bath School Teachers , Union of. Pottsville: • •
The officers shall consist of a President, two
VieePrestdents, Secretary, two Assistant Secretariats,
Treasurer, and an Executive Committee of five mem
bers; their term of office shell be for one year com
mencing on the first Monday in Angst and • they shall.
. • .
be elected by ballot_ .
_Bra, The dutiesni - the aeveral offices shall be such
as usually devolveupon the officers o f deliberaUce
Be Ttb i l lee Th ' s regabir meetings shall beheld on the dust
lifonday of every month, - and shali - commence at 8
o'clock, P.M homApriltoOctober.inclusive, and at
o'clock; P. X. during the reinalnder of the year
such place as may be provided by the 'Executive Com;
nrittee. Special meetings May be called by the Presi
dent upon the written request of ten members. • .
Etb. The members shall be ecllve rand Ithoorary.—
The active members shall consist of the officers and
teachers of the several Scurday Schools and each mem
ber shall be entitled to erne vote. The Honorary mem
bers shall consist of the Panora of the several Churches
of the Borough and any friend - of the Sabbath Schools
who maybe 'unposed and elected,' and they shall
have the privilege of speaking but not of Voting:
, 6th, In all points of order, this Assoc:Al= shall be
• .veined by the established practice *of.deliberative
.Sts,, Any additions or alterations to these ArOcks of
Mereaticrn, or resolutions for the government of, this
Association , may be adopted by a vote Of two-thirds of.
of the members present, provided they be presorted
in writing and read at a regular : meeting
. one month
prior to taking final action upon the same..
-
. sth, The. order of exercises shall be as follows
.let, Calling to order. - •.
2d, Devotional exercises. • •
85,• Beading and approval of minutes.. '
stle, Report
of. Committees. • . '
6th. 'Unfinished huainees. • '
6th. Notrileation and election of officers or honorary.
•
. .
Ith, New 'lir • .
6th. Subjects Interest to the Sabbath School cause.
9th. Devotlo eternities. • .
76th, Adjournment
' Adopted the Committee, August Y; 185 I.. • _
. . Jona W . smart, Chemin:in.
• The Association then went into an election Jar
officers, for the ensuing year, with • the. following
result: • • •
• Pnrstorerr—STEPHEN II ARMS •
..„ '
• • 'Vim PitEeneerrs--11on. Wm. L. Henenstaire,
Gen. J. X. Sigfried. - • •
Banat TAIIT-3. A. 'hi. l'Oeldollll.
Asmara= Snaravieutei—Ool. --11 . H. Raineey;
JoIMM. Miller, - • • • -
Tamuscarn—C.- H. Dangler: -
EsEelynn Comurrrsze--Bev„ John C: Harper,
J. - B. Buns, John B eebner, John V. Bickel, Joe.'
Mr: Bickel offered the following : -
Timer:dm, That the Secretaries of the several.
Sabbath Schools be requested to tarnish the See-
rotary. of this Association with a complete list
of the officers Mid teachers of. their :respective
Schools before our next meeting. • • • •
• On motion the Secretary was instructed to pro
cure the necessary books and stationary for the
Association and t his bill atnext meeting.'
Oh motion the Secretary was instructed to have
tke proceedings . of this evening riubliahed in' the
Borough•papens; . also a -notice of the _regular
meetings among the religions notices. •
On motion a rite at thanker was extended to
the Trustees of the: First Presbyterian Church
or their kindness in offering rim the rise of their
Church in which to hold our meetings.
Adjourned after Benediction by lame-
Riley, - to meet in Second Presbyterian Church, -
Market street, on the'first Monday in September,
where all interested in the Sabbath School cause
are cordially incited to attend.. . •
J. A. ES, Passitosn, Seareteui.
13,61/ CO
Proceeding:: of Ma Borough Vounca.—Ati. stated
meeting of Council was held- on Meadow eve
-0118 trnt• Present. 'Rastas. Seitzinger, O. lief&
ner, Griffith, Foa, Brown, Lotmard; Bawd,
and 8. Refract, Preen. -
llEnutes of.. previous meeting were read and
The Street Committee yepoi:ted resetting of
curbs in Laurel street, finished, overflew of.water:
at .High and Lyon .streets..remedied ,• wortc - on
E ar oomatreetteished ; of John Schenk, SA
correct., by deducting 5Q naafi fl PIM 11188 yarns
making 0.9, as per. agreement with,lifr. Schenk.
- The Vommittee asited,to .be uontisincd on cross
ing- at Sebald street end Church Alley, and die
efram subject of conummication of Howl
woi, 04iittee .re bill of Ph*
• _ .ohief Po_
Mr. Blown Wee instructed to collect balances due
the Borough by ,L 0. Conrad and F. W. Donna.
Rule. were suspanded
to enable =abating
a. canoe
grionner,to eta:Ult.
- An orduranoe in "reference to -yearly license. of
'Union Ball Association, was res.d, when on mo:
tion of Mr. Griffith the natter was referred to a.
Committed consisting of Messrs. Griffith, lifilsod
Se The •
The Committee on Survey reported grades for
"Peacock sod otherstreets m Norwegian Addition
to, the Borough of. Pottionlbsi. On motion the •
grades were adopted. • ,
~toa.
• SPecial
.Committee :en repairs
-ObtureS:
st Clay.
Meat, - and in reference - to - addithon - to
building, were continued...• _
The rules werentrePanded to hear ato nee
from Good 'lntent Engme Company.. The Com
pany .petiticros Ccarna to repair its house, raise
pavement and bridge-sinter.---XaVtar referred to
Com. of Fire Apparatus. • •
Mr.-Bu call the attention Of the Council
to the bad edition of fire pings at Fifth and,
Isisharitorisoi streets; -Fourth and Market, and at;
County Prison.
An ordinance to regulate the licensing of Pub
lic exhibitions, wet read. :For a circus the price
to be from $3O to $5O-other. exhibitions Si to
Ori motion of . Mr. Brown it was reeolved that
the Chief Burgessbe required to make monthly
infanta of 'alimonies received by him for the use
of the Borough. -
The ordinance was ordered to be published.
The Borough Treastirees statement was read
and filed— • -stairs communication from Chas; Loeser,
A. g
that he had throwntpen to appropriation for pnia
lie use, as &street, the easterly part of totritunbered
125, Norwegian Addition to Pottiville, was read,
when on motion 'twits accepted ass street.
A petition praying that Jackson street be
opened from-. East Market to Arch Street, was
read and referred to St. Cont. •
A Petition praying for the building of a culvert
from Centre and 'Onion *streets, across Centre
down Union, to therailreadi was read and refer
red to the Street Committee.
A commtmication from Riseph Bowen asking
that Council atitherise the numberingof all the
houses in the Borough, was read sod referred to
the
if of Ordinances. The matter of
seeing if the ordinaoce had beenstrietly followed
in numbering houses, was referred to same Com-
Oa motion 'of Mr. Russel it was resolved that
the appropriatioa to the Humane Steam Fire En
gine Company, for 1867, be paid.
On martin of Mr: Leonard it was resolved. that
the yearly appropriation to tbe steam Are compa
nies of the 'Borough; he increased from $5O to.
$lOO eich. _ _ • .
On motion Of 51r. Brosim it was resolved that
the wages of the night police be taxed at the - Same ,
rate paid the"street hands; $1 50 per day, and
that the police force be reduced, by -discharging
On motion Of Mr. Fox it was resolved that the
President be empowered to employ counsel on.
subject of obstructions at Contention Alley.
- The matter 'of fixing porch at Mr. Hurley's
house, Railroad street, was referred to the St.
Com., - with power, to' act..:
The Coin. on Firs App., was instrnoted to send
hose to Philadelphia for repairs, when needed.
The aubjeetof repairing crossing opposite Burk..
hartit's was 'referred to St. Com.' with power to
•
The Corn, of Survey was authorized report
grades for streets at the upper end of Norwegian
and hi shantongo streets. •
On motion of Mr. Lauer'it was resolved that
the Street Committee be instructed torreceive
proposals for the building of a - 3 feet circular cul
vert, either of brick or stone, from Hotel street to
the east, aide of Centre' street; oppoeite Mauch
'Chunk street. . .
Bill of Jos. Derr, 576 20,Corn.
was referred - to St.
• ' Orderawere directed id be drawn'ler themol
lowing amounts : - •
Philip Steinbach,
Night Police,
Fr. Storfregen,
Ban»ari & Ramsey,.
Simon Derr
John Schenk,
A. K. Whittier,
Chas. Tyler,
Street hands,
B. Barr, .... . . .. ...
Humane Brea Company,
Previonz
the Anti;Railroad-hlonopoly Feeling in hum!.
1 - 171 County—. Large Meeting .of Clitrens.—No
stronger evidence of the indignation which is en
tertained against the extortionate and grinding
policy.ot the Residing Railroad Company, as far
as nos Region, is concerned, could be afforded,
than was given on Wednesday evening last. at
Union Hall in this Borough. - It having been an
nounced that a meetin wool held, at which_
Hon E. W. Hughes - we d address on the
polic3r of that Company an the ease. of deliver
ance from its tyranny, at an early hoar the spa
cious room'was filled by our citizens.
The meeting was called to order, and the fol
lowing citizens chosen as officers for evening
PassinErt,---R. R. MOBRIB. -
VIEE ,PHEatDitgrsz—Micbel F. Maize, Pottsville,
Joseph B. Patterson, d 0.,. Daniel L. Esterly, do.,
Pranklipß lissercher, do., William Pollock, do.,
Nicholas Graber; Ashland, Edward -Connelly,:
Reilly, Mioliael•Weaver, Minersville, Dr. George
W. Brown, Pt. Carbon, William H. Uhler, Pine
grove, Daniel fichapPell, Schuylkill Haven, John
Sterner, Minersville. ' - •
Sgcurrantria—Jogi.,' B, Mcassiorr, J. A. M. -
PASSIM:ME, N. C. &act-cif, P. B. Werzacit.
Ur: Hughes was then introduced to the meet
ing, and spoke for nearly two honrs. It was a.
powerful and cow:dm:dye exposition of the ruinous
policy of , the Reading Railroad Company. As it
was reported 'stenographically, we hope to be able
to'lay it before our readers at an early day;
Mr. Hughes showed hoar it has been the pollciy
of that Company tu absorb every outlet from this
County, as far as possible, for the purpose of con-
Tolling its business in its own selfish igterest.
Originally a road of 58 Miles, it now owns and
contiole 1040 miles of track—three times as much
as the. Pennsylvania Central Railroad possesses.
Its capital is about 29i millions of dollars. Its
profits in 1864-5-6. were between, four ; and five
millions of dollars per, annum, the. greater part
from coal:. - Every - projected road in competition
with, it, has'been bought by it, and it seeks the
- power , to buy and sell coal which if granted will
place our pecple completely at its' tneroy. As it is,
ley its grasping, avanciOns pOlicy, this Region has
this year lost over half a million of tons, collieries
have been closed, and the working classes are in
many instances, -suffering for want of brea,g.
' The value of the landed and colliery interests of.
this Region which contains' one-ball of the An
thracite Coal. of Pennsylvania, is estimated at
8100,000,000. Mr. Hughes say° that one per
cent. of this amonnt-81,000,000—ssubscribed by
these interests, would sere two outlets to mar
. ket in competition with the Reading - Railroad, as
capitalists have offered to' assist the enterprise if
Selm,ylkill County showe art inclination to move
in the matter effectively. Mr: 'Hughes contended
that if this investment should not be made, the
value of that property under the present policy of
the Beading Railroad', would decrease lovable
fifty per cent. Mr. Hughes Proposed to satack
that monster Corporation in front, on both flanks
and in the rear—m front, by building competing
toads, on the daubs by legislation limiting its
were, in the roar.'by bringing it into courts of
tiLtice to answer charges of extortion and rob
ery. Let the people organise and act- as a unit
in this matter, and they will compel the racmopcs
ly that is slowly and surely destroying-them, to,
succumb - • ,
Of course we do not attempt to give in a hasty
summary, even a faint ides of Mr. Einghea's able •
address and the - unanswerable arguments he em- -
,ployed. We merely allude to them, promising
that we will Publish the address as soon as we re
ceive it. In the meantime we prermine . that he
will' deliver , it at various points in the County.
Last:evening be spoke in Tamagni.
Before the meeting adjourned on .,
Wednesday ,
- *livening, the following resolutions were rend and
nottramonslY adopted'. . •
linartvro, That the pWirle of the Schuylkill Coal
have witnessed , with concern and alarm, the
arsenal absorption by the Philadelphia and Reading
Railroad Company, all the lateral roads and rival
lines of transportation for our coal and other prodacta :
that the exoriatant rates charged place this Region at
greattisaderalage as nonrated with the other Anthra
cite coal Heide, and we see In the course of policy de--
veloped, an evident intention to control the' product
arid sale of coal, to;) that for all practical purposes, this
monopoly, if not restrained, will own the•lands and
collieries of this Region. and 'our.people be made mere
' limns of wow:laid drawers of water for thiegigantio
corporation.' • •
- ••••.et.van, That the mination made by the Sail-.
'toad Company against line trade. is driving bushman '
f r om the Valley of tbe Schuylkill to that of the Lehigh;
and thus depriving this Region of that trade least sub
ject to flactuationa in price, that 'pays best, and which
would at all aeaBOOS of tbe year, furnish a yatualfie
home market for our products. • '
REsOLVED,. That the enormous charges on the local
roads—greater in most trusboices than the cost of Puts
venation on common wagon roads—not only rani
fests a disregard of the feelings and fete/lasts of our
community, hat la MEW them to an extent that vitae
nay stiletto th. cost of living, and =serpent cost or
the production of coal.
Rt6OLVID, That the purchase by the Philadelphia, I
and Rraattig Railroad Company, of the control of the
Auburn and Allentown and of the Lehigh River and'
sehnyilrfil Haven roads, for, the purpoee of defeating ,
their co-Distraction, was a greet fraud on every
owner wbose land hat' bean taken and sea for on
the bads that he slumid have sv finished road, and cm
the whole community, in whose right and behalf the
franchlees were granted and the power to take land
conferred:
REBOIXED; That there be a committee Of five ap
pointed, with power - to:call wieetiriga. and to devise,
plans for securing the necesaary capital to constract
additional outlets from this Region, and to make and
'publish such reports of our capacity to Tuna* tonnage
and trade, and otherwise to guild capitalists to aid in
making such outlets. • •
• Reser:rm. That the President of this meeting be Olin
of said committee, and that he appoint the ether man-
Rwico.vm That
.we earnestly urge on „both the po
litical, conventions of this County to require written
pledges from their several candidates for the Legisla
ture. that they will
_worse the granting of any ihrther
corporate rights or trivilegew to the Philadelphia and
Reading Railroad Company, and that - they will make
every possible effort practiashie through legislation,
to have this Company made accotmtatile - before not
body and before - the cants for the reausnessabales Of
their franchisee. . .
The following committee Was Appointed' Undei
the.provisions of, the above : resolutions •_-B. W.
langliesi,Chairmart,R.R.ldarria, Was Wilder,
Hon. Benj. Benner, F. B. Raercher. '
To all Interesied in the IN elfaie of 80U*
fiiil 4:4llsty - '
The =dentinal, Committee appointed at the meet
ing of citizens held at the "Utdon Hall, Arlie, on
W WM
edneeday, August 7th ~ take this ear crivortn
nay merely taannottnee to ,
2st, That we propose an may and effective
tion of all the interests of the Schuylkill Coal=
(now se much oppressed by the policy end course of
action of the _Philadelphia and Reading Railroad CO=
may,) and to adopt memo= ladlcated.by the resoln.
tons of the taxiing, until you all bartsecared effeeta-
Yd. Wellesin3 to express to yoo our firm belief that
the $100,000.000 of caPital invested_ itY WWerq_owneto
vistaedtvera in Schnyikill can. oe se or
as to set mauls. au& that when *dale so
complished nos corporation will have the power_
either to al
your Interests or to dictate the tars=
npon which yon shall Make theta productive..
Bd. That unless you Set the *lofted Ninety= VA
ookooo win : sink to half that thin= that by the in
vestment in other and new outlets of bat Otte per cent
tiot of that • amount. at good poi:l pr° 1 1,,, mtereet, you can
not only savefrom this but add e ery
considerably to the value of.yora ,
• 4th That this sottiect • Interests everytust M. the
: Schuylkill Begins, as It affects not only the value of
property but the rate of wages of labor, and , the ges!
.eral prosperity. B. W. amass, •
H'H Mote.
R. A- W tram - -
Porravxu.i, August 9th,186T. •
To the Owners of privation' the lines of , the Auburn
and Allentown and Schuylkill Raven and; TAddith
All of yon who have settled for damages, either' by
voluntary release or the verdicts of }nden for the rtgot
to way to the above mentioned roads, respectively are
Ireqiteettd to presentyOar 'Severe cases to, under
it% releases andverdicts ware . taxation tbe bnplied
obligati= and contract of the companies Incorporshad•
to make such reeds .respectivekr, to forward and , com
plete these mincasde accurdhey to the rawridorm of
their several thaaen : '
Tne PtaLadcaptibt sad itesitai Btfteoad Compsny
bought up the control of each (tithes. (lainPoodes. rot
for tharorpocn carom:plating the raids, bat, fa the dew
impose of preventing tbem from' ever beteg:
• dolattekand - are: now holdteg poseeedem of certain.
ff t" tbrwe s t i°l.ll 4===te etnietki peosrs f i g .
this Connrn may undertake to butid. each modal:ton
the pert of the 'Philadelphia ant 'Rennet Beamed
•11m3plutritl a WOW artmom arm xotorearma, navy OA
each oryou sitnatedia berme stated, and ePowtlm
!Port& hand sire comtaaaity. ire, offs vatrig cbarpony ate' bs maid-
responalble, hoth in the Omuta sad before - tbe Legions- ,
tare, lliv.underaispted. - tn behalf bt Vomit and,
MUM
tare;.;.
W attldi= m r ' 911111:40147
Pea* ' SidaSiff.
libtaaJoumsat lefty*? leaden Ipuebed off
ripidlY - SUlhatnecieriesedne in teeth tbeeribefore She.
tame tort bat , ha tornieury with Seidel gentlemen from
dt lonis..c.nthothit‘whie Were .arixibms to reach there
cm ittelieth of Janet to - itiliese the 'greed tiseemblage'
of BishoPi altd. FANO, to midst to the etitanixedint of
aeon Saints. Of coMse We triended pretty rapidly, 4.
We had bat fiair daya . frorn :London - to Rome , ;.. When
ire.tesettadhlitithe pitsienves :from a steamer
had jolt name ashore front. Naples. They Were kept
ht . guar°, haT tatant 74l r o &Wirt cohisetrietx.ut ti
several peseengese hexing taken the steamer at Ovine.
Itecohlafro in . ae Where the cholera wee WeVaiti n g -
They represented the lodes very greet at Bowe.. We
beide. litge =meet , irwl three gtthe yrilrty agrfed ts?
thinit 'admit departPle next 67; We had our pasePrate .
visaed and the ittentaie was to leave for Naples the next
day at tea cecleck. Part of the reenpaty had already
se emed 'their tided.. anti the/ reneged ine to atop..
farther information trout t h e touriste--I did so and re,
ported.
Tutee olio 'ha 'not paid their femme, rou - i
eluded to think of dt until morning. After s , tittle far
ther consultatien; the *pothers from:Stlonle terxeed
•to go on.. Theircordiadearather ridlierled their turn
ing back when within two:. days.ot Bonie. declaring it. •
was no hotter. than at Sk Louie, and theylnel stud the
cholera thereat:id could gaol It agair4, and balder, if
they did not go on they - sr:aid lose their pteeagentoneY ,
I did not like the Idea of hacking 'oat, end started - to:
the office to pay my pssisege also; but they refased to
take it until I exhibited, my passport visaed, which I had
left at MY hotel. I waited back for it and I felt the
heat So ones-eating. thitt I was Almost exhinsted. :I:
asked the only person who could speak a little Neenah
at the lmtel, if it waa boiler in Rome. He replied that
it wss, and when the math wird blew it ins Unpaid
bie to keep comfortable in Item at this seasee.of the •
year.. :raving left the United States to get rid of the
extreme heat and UT recruit my - health, I considered
I 'discretion the better part of valor. I resolved not
_to
rio farther, but to Wnn. to ?aria Being shine , an n,
net understanding their *Triage, 1- managed-to learn
&few 'French words to enable me to get back to Paris.
1 I dropped into a coach With four others. -We soon en- •
' deavored to dad each other out, I was addrsed in •
several langiages. I answered .in English; and told'
them I wars framlbe United alders:, One of the party..
Au Armenian. could speak a few words in itegesh, and
he felt a great anxiety to know everything about the . :
United BMW. He. was an Armenian merchant on his
way to Manchester to buy goods, Ma was. p a rtici:dirty
an imus to ImoW all, about the eaten Premect In the .
' United States.' After most anxious exertions on the
part of Ito thto Mike each °thee taukratoods, 'gon d : .
up - by declaring that the United States watt"iwonder
col country... We Steak/mid %lithe occupants of the
match consisted of two Armenians, two Russians, one.
Greek, - tind one American. Verily extremes bad met, ;
- and when the Armenian told the Rogan, sitting by ,
my side, ttutt I was an American from the linitcd
States, lie aelvedtioth of enyhaerdli and pressed theta to
lila•bosom, and his mantel:unite lit np as if lie was de,
lighted. This was the only language w e e cculd express;
.bat it shows the strong tie Which seems to unite the
two countries in a band of friendship,' both countries
having last passed through the same ordeal, the aboll
-
In
passing through Fiance from I/10PN to idanseillee.
wepassed 'through Normandy and the Valley. of the
Rhone from Lyons. These are the richest portions of
France.. ,The cultivation of the soil in France, pieeents
a mod picturesque appearance: - While England*
the appearance ola tr-st park, France looks likes huge
garden. In 'England we have the * green fields and
hedges, but seidoin more thin one kind of crop in a
field, which generally rangee from half an acre up to
five or six acres. l e n France there *re but few hedges
-madam feeees. As far as the eye can reactione sees as
kit were, one vast garden, with all shades and colors in
termixed. I can compare: it to nothing bats patchwork
quilt laid off hi, biotite of different colors, 'spread upon
the earet., As in England, the land/meets' iutirPlie r ae d
With treeSovltlch retie - We the eye, but the different
shades of the landscape interspersed, gives • a great
contrast to that of England. In France there are pro
bably one hundred hutdholders to where there is one in
England, but, the:patches owned by.nuoiy are'
suisU.
and Coneequently.each one putts in different crops on
email spaces, without any fences or apparentlines or
divisions. This accoauts in t great measure; forthe
garden-like sppearance of the whole landscape.
'Bet
tbe French area very artistic - . people,: and the bappY
bleeding of - colors': even In agriculture, seems to tie
'chariwteristic .iat the People. You see bailee'. hire
'dwellings., Trees, shrubbery' sad flowers, blended . In
Perfect barfoony. Setae hi adorn almod every dwelling
andluif in the country.. Out of the towns, and even
in the towns and
.citiett, ever y foot of spare ground pre.
cents something liettutifel and green.' •
There le Oniferitare which is also very different I n
France from England. There , is the , same:absence . of .
barns in France, but.one sees no cattle grazing In the
fields. There being neltedgee or. fences, compel them
to soil the cattle its pens- Hire and there one sees a
Peri - glaring. but they are witched by a child or woman,
, and are trained to • follow wherever they he:. The :
Frenchire eminently asocial people, because nearly
ail their housesin the country ate bale in little chafers'
Or small villages, and are not scattered over the spun
. try like inthe linked States and England. . : Everything
-looks old. : All the houses are. covered with tile or
thatched: roofs- , anAn large number are completely
covered witlf moss, whilethoee with thatched roots look.
black and rotten oh the tops,. with flowers and plants
growing out of the roots.; We saw;but few stacks of
grain, except at tows or market places, where all the.
grain: appeared to be heeded, stacked up and threshed
out on tho ground. We observed-atseveral places they
'
were spreading out the grain ov the bare . ground, and
threshing .it out., with rollers drawn over it by tattle.
The threshing machine, I Judge; his not penetrated
Into France yet;
•WhatAbeantlild country the United States could be,
made if . moreattention was paid to adorning' the red
derides Of. all clasies inthe country. • We beg and Im
plcee but fanners - to tut - down no more . trees then la
absolutely necessary.' Let ; thelines of the fences
be
adorned with trees, even if they are small: Where
there are none let them be. planted, .and In clearing
land.let Epee of trees !Rand. together with a fen - clumps
in large fields. :If large, they can be trimmed so as not
to throw tire mash shade, as they do iu England and'
France.: They can form no idea how It anhanoes the
.beauty of a farm and increases its - value; independent
of comfort it affords to the animals grazing •in
our broad fields;
. Let everyman or woman, who cuts
!down a tree of any kind Minecesserily, be treated aka
;barbarian, and an enemy to the human race. •• •
Since France has adopted the protective. policy, her
manufactures and agriculture have been largely ?time
kited. Ea great has been the ilicrease of her bleak
'stuffs, that ebe stgiplles England annually now with a
greater amount than the' United. States does. Her.
tnangresseso rapidly, that she uow
exceuls tfaetnres
he finer P
aer fabrics and almos t bide:defiance
folbe competition of other countries. Probably 'such
I magnificent:4lBfeet! of - elegant goods from Frante,.
'was never seen before, as now ails nearly one-half the
Expieition. Some of these goods are .so 'gorgeous, -
that words tan warmly be found to convey an idea of.
their ;lemmas and beady_ An this has been achieved
thropg'h hoe protective policy, 'and, the price of labor is
Yearly adeancing in France. • Even now laborers eara
eighty mote a day. in T . atia; d . b Y malting overtime ,
: which many of theta do. they earn a dollar a flay: This
pais better tfiln bathe United. States at the present
• Ilme,:With the Met price . Of petr6donti.. .•
'One institutions me glorloier compared withthose of
Prance, sad the loupe I . stay In Europe, the more I
a d m i re and ad o re may rem my native land. Bat I must
'tauten thet there a more order, more security and
protection of Person and prdperty even here la France,
than to the thrited States. Here Industry is protected,
t4thougtf the laws bcarhard upon the working classes,
end they cite never rise: Hire also, crime and' public
'robbers:are. Prinitthed witholit repot to character* .
:Position. HON collect hundreds of thousand of people
together, to rriee- a great fete;; and all le orderly, quiet--
end polite, wide:rat scarcely ea angry word 'spoken, but
all apparently in good Manor. No person, not - evettait
Ixidurian: MU be found kicking up a row, for if he
d oes , a
.policeman has" his hand on. his Shoulder in a
aedoad. A girl froni 'Ragland, I believe, atteMpted to
pick a TOM% trier Eitasition. She was arrested,,im
mediate*: take** lrefore a tribunal,
..and tentencedlast-r
_ two yee j a ii n o r t s oarnent., and to be abject toile W.:::
.valliance of _the police for five Years. • Such a 'Omni'.
'and Itevereienteoce will stela eueer to the, people of •
'e c h ay p r ofcelmti, subject : to our Mode of diatenrising
NothilOut protection, will prevent our. Working .
c hews e rt en sinking to a worse condition than the-la
boring chaneitin Europe. We say Worse, because here .
UK lamb% - doses have no rights,. and rarely if ever
rise... They hare net the .same esiduttites - that. oars
'havkand if they receive wages which enable themlo
live; %glare. or mein be contended With their lot; .and
quietly take what their teak masters choose to give,
them. Here the laborer sebnitte to thelsws in the ma:.
:king-of, width behasno ,Hale to, bc lah,j,reris
I. to. be klaberir for Me. But how different is It
hi the United SAW, -where the menses of tini people
- not Only make the laws, bilt elect their own Mere.
Fr ance th e l a boring areais ft cypher. In the United -
Statesbe Tea so vereign, and the barefooted son of a
borer can aspire to the highest oface lu the World; a
President elected by the people to .execute their laws,
We read a few *Wet ago, in the Jointed of powaimre.,
a fox , time pa per In New yetis; • that protection wee .
kmed, eud that it
and
be revived again; that
taxation is Mgt', and that the lib - ming classes in the
United States must necessarily -maims* fall Into the
saw con dition as they were in Europe. This free
trade ba=nal. s upported by the agents of
forehlocotm•
tries, - Spealm the. truth. Such is . their Inevitable fate
w ithnut :p r otection; and how ranch more: keenly will
our laborers' feel such a condition, than the lebiners
Europe . Protection to American induetry, tbereene,
hoar great.want and Smeared have It-or ell thtt ad
vantages of our Institutions to the laberlag elsisies will
h e a c urse instead ors blesalitg. We tberefOre, appeal
to every lab o r i ng mara, to demand protection to Amer- .
b an t e derdry, We say to every farmer demand pto.
t w o = tn- Antsti creit indrastiN because it will create
market at horne for your products. 'The demand for
bielliattni Enland 'et/undated agriculture In,
tw n e e .t o Gernaany, and in the Bakk. to inch - an ex ,
'tent that they are an nutting large !nu - pluses, and they .
ton reach an d supply England 'much wiener than the
r n itad mates. tan. '. If If were not for 'Abe immense'
Lade fi e hreme Englind and the totted . Stares, we.
wo w; no t igi lOplyll4lll l 4 with halta s vetch bread-'
sum es ere now do, and even what we do supply is
buts.dropin the hricaate - n am i ate 4 with what vie ecita
!um labiate- teti thateratli , the usrds "Protection `
to Anal= Washy." he inscribed On 14 your terns,
and pu t up - as anger-boards at you Wes-roads, un-_,
el they became our easterner tit houseboldwordein eiay
w t of the land, and then let
.arty Iteinesentatice .
asks .to betray-the. **pie bY. voting Lis free -
trade I‘ %PioteCtiOn la the onlihope for ts'e pit l it er ity •
and happiness of all the people of the United States.
Ender its iaelitonthaS 'influence, we will inmate,. in'
wealth, paver wed Po9olethin. - - pied to the bar:.
tory of any nation in the world. • • .. •
. qua Aanewsta-.4. gip' Ondulstratian of Justice;
ein bria be/dation, And the aoa-peintaLno Tent of triad;
.naht,tandpablic.planderain lid warmers:, These a r e
th e b o b on:: Which our noble stdp of State alai he
wteckedend if riot checked, we dimly babe's that
tom. dnls of our / 1 90 /in nanth e tadr; * No Sween
y:ma t me mare can eidat whets crime tint adeptXtryf
an d pnna ptly punished by our ioantrY, end where col
'
rapt reentssentstives ire bribedmid public ogees are
~ptternitteff to.. idonihr With hallunitY. (kevaiediart:in
,hhitt Places vaithaatt-Fnnildanent. sown corrupts the
w h o l e un nmenity--and when:the iisser, become tor- -
rapt; tiddahad miaweild'ettisa, - .and vepoblicart Inert
- Whey:3o 4 o whittled lOU the I'4*d/a Initinhiee of
. the *Unfit mint ezikisti7:triniagek Adif :lei/
_ may swim arts ponip arid gilt* c . .f thefew, and.
'the dertOtton tile.uwir. that We cii.a eithreihi. Ake
'Vest raise whd ,i1ah7.,.... 44 -tuftiiiithdrY 4 xid ioeeln.
:nerd: sod thee 4414 1 10 4 -Niutt : thrsaten Its distractkee.
eanithielseared sit all fiords. occioa
. 103 a the keet,l Ina*. Olt bait**. tin niOnA•to
athi-, liriatialF to reach theist. pellalit
' -
- • '
$357 36
393 25
.6 00
24. 60
47 50
69 00
50 00
1.12
2so 40
13•37
100 00
$1 213 262 0 2260
psi
the People arejantiasble In : insetting to sterner mesa
'ores to root them oiit.. Scsnetirnes, as inwar, a
thin of laWo heßolOoll tomeositY to Pres s -7
tbobueltritionsut tits eracukry. Wad to secure the ad
adrdit*ltol of the laws,* their pcult3 ,. ; and the haug
tug ofAlevitif the, vile enemies to their country and ,
to 1 12 4 1 0dnas-t ° b ll : l2lii r 19 0 0 1 have a most Mu
taxi eta:et:T:3om the tr. becomes impregnated ; With
diewritO m,:'vepors spiesding *time mid death athund.
*mighty strum arises crate:ring over the earth, fre
`quietly Main deittnictSon to property and life, bat ,
tiovivarollogiFits -iste.nesestrayine,
all these PernieaM s elements, and replacing them with
the Pure, lieaith'invigorsttagairs viNt4 etineeiaUnatme.
to rejoice.
Writing-from this standpoint, we can conceive of no,
curie so great as that which tends to exulerraine and
&Sem our . gtatious Repablii, which istrelatVkAl e ,
Wipe of the woad :and we consider no imisfuottat too
great for such irtitaill‘ 3ituder - is akreat crime--brit
it principally' le against the. Individual. Arson, rape ?
and Many °the:mice great dimes, tint
insignificance com Pared with the mime of a Corrupt
judge, acarropt legislator; and a public robber,; These
are rabies Austad. the country, end son , a nd fun
punialunMA onghtto. moth finch etttOtosisilawf os %) . f.
postnile—bni let It be dene, mug' lt.is
resort.to theiamomeasures that were absolutelyane
cessary top c wity Sae, Francisco. - Of What 150 Wss it
to sacrmce the lives , of at least EOO4OO persons, and
pebd a treasure of nearly $5,000,000,000 by the Generai
atidiltate govertunents, and the people: in preiterving
the Union and our institutions, if the people Will sitffer
it to be gradually undermined by those who.make and
administer the laws, and by public robbers! The let;
ter class - ot criroinais are more dangerous them the open
rebel, because their vtamin infused Into the Body politic
,is gradual. but it is sore to destnoy in the end. It is
only against such criminals that weivould invoke swift
and sure punishment. at all hazards.
The' reader must poetical,. our strorig lump... It
*Logs front tlie love We hive for our "own country; in
contrasting it forthe Brat time, with the inatitations of
the old world, as we them worldrui around us: We
believe - we would prove recreant to our' duties as an
American cittieu if we dtd not want' and point out to
the people 4'l/4 Vatted States the only digigerspat
now meow* our grand RePublic.; Adieu for the pre
.- • Tris filwarcht Emma.
EVIL
LETTER PROM OF,RMANY.
fillayettee-Itit FortificatiousFronhfars
llotable -liaises-The • trapezia!
Illaryellone Sorrow -The
Cannel-lriett to the Osaka% 0f...1061in.
neebera-Tkovris, the It hine-7The Section-.
Castles, etc. -Cologne-Ito. Cathedral'-
The interceding -Fetttaree of the C.ltyr ,
Caseel—TheAraivereity of Gottingen-
Arrival at Plortbeinsi ' .
VORRISFOOFFIOI OF TOT MINZIIB' .jpt-Exua..]
. . . -
• . • ' *oar:tram; Manover, July 41st, IS6T.
In trive.ling through Europe,' it is. melancholy to ob
rierve what a vast amount of. time; talent, latior and
money are expended neon the -great purpose of war
fare among men. • Soldiers in gaudy nniforms, cireri . .. ! ..,
late with swaggerints eirldes; making the day pietam,,-
cause, and, th e rdshticud With sorigs of reverrY: - ..MCP
lions of rifles that
.Were made in the first' place fer- to 1
other, purpose, Min. that of .taking. humeri:life, Mtn'
- been condemned united; and wagon in:the lintels ,
of initiate' as more : .watthiWisipaua in the,. term: of
needle!gani. Men's Ingenuity , art and scinceare all".'
' D o or jamb , proOtiinted In the onustinction, of .deadly
missiles; There 'seems to be a jealcats rivalrY between
doctors deviling pew ways, and means to save life, On
the one baud, and artiiiiis that rack their Inventive ,I
•
talent for more cunning measures to destroy it, on the .1
c6er.. . instead of erecting more asyleme4" school
houseeand univertiltiesi , men barricade themselves from
their fellow : nice by grect bastions and fortifimtions.; I
and of this kind of perverted labor the city of Manna '
on the Rhine-maybe taken as an illustrion example:.
1 This town to surrounded with walla and trenches and
citadels to a degree that, if its hones were built of
, mother of pearl, with diamond windows, and its Streets
I paved with bricks of gold, running over with milk and'
horiey, it could not well be better protected from the '
rapacious covetommeesof an Invidious the. harsteadaf., l
this; It le simply, a very respectable old town,that
Might he a great deal larger and airier, and better off,
hut for the 'ugly, stone belt that 'cramps it up lire such'
narrow limits, and seta as a 'declare on its vitality -
Yet not content with ate . present'capacities:for resist
-an ci, Prnista-since tier abandonitent of Luxembourg
-is making this place sitringdr, If possible, and more
impregnable than ever. Whatever be the strategic ad.
vantages of this encasement of a people may be , known
to writer heads, but is eitnimely problematical to the
About, the principal things of interest to lie seen at
Mayence are some old impressions by the Inventors - of
the* art of : printthg,.Gutenberg and his associates, da
ting from the years t4ti9 to 14,12. • What a great discov
ery that Wee i ,And , -yet, what -wield Gutenberg say
could he - visit this sublunary sphere and nee some of the
great cylindrical presses of the present time, and watch
the act ot enchantment that'creates the literature. of
our day: - These old reties of printing, isolated-from
- the'worhi by these grim walls bristling with canonry;
what a -paradox they present! My American friend.
eale-"The one is the type of barbarism, Jand - the other
" the barbarism of type !" • •• -. , -
A.nhoura ride on the railroad brought - meth Prank
fent, labia, has every appearance of: an opulent - and
. prosperous city, there being many houses inallt on the'
. style of some of the palatial. residences of New York
'and Philadelphia. ' - The -quaint old hooey wherein
. Goethe Was born, is situated here Inoue of the-narrow
er streets :called called the liirsligraben, end is kept in its
primitive 'state -by tee CitY. . The room 18 . wh i ch the
gre at German poet was accustomed to write, is still.
preseriedeo they say-es it was In his own time, Con;
taLning the same furniture that it did' then, .- Asa con
ned, to this; one may visit the original hone - of the
p o thsehtid family in , the Sudengasise,end Where the
_ maternal parent insiked upon residing to the time 'pi
her death, though her. SOUS. were :almost wielding the,
thistnetal destinimi of tallow, The house ilia a Very'or
dieary appearance, and' is on the- narrow, repulsive=
looking street dem which the Jews; in former times,
Were not p e rmitted to Issue after sunset, of on Sundays
and hoiydays. They have outlived this tyrannical pp..
- pinialon, however, and aid now the occupants of some
of the hatedsomeit'illiis Of tie suburbs. , Thdplace of
the greatest historical interest of Frankfort lis the Im
perialHallin the Rocuier; where the Princes of Get-.
many were wont to dine,yelthAtteir newly elected Em
peror. The walla are embellished Udth. Portraits of
these EMpertin successively from Charlemagne the
First,' to Preside IL, the last Roman EmPetor of the :
German nation. One- of . the, finest prnanients of th e
a
*city is galvano-plastic monumental group represent
-4 p e t e ecerg,Enat lead Schaffer. *.'Phere are aiso,two
superb Statues of Goethe and dchiller. The principal
-
hnrfness street, the Zell has
.quite an Arridrican aspect;
and theisubroban promenadea are exceedingly line.-
' FrorriTrankfurtj proceeded to the 'charming water-
In place, - Wiesbaden, though watering place la a name
probably less pertinent than gambling ,place would be,
for it la quite equal tin- this respect to Baden-Bades.-.
Among others who here Wand -their fortunes on the
basurd of a wheel, was a yourig Smith Caroliiian,Who
had cruised theposan On the same Meatier Wlth-ple.-
..1 'believe thrpoor -fellow lost smionly, for-he had an
SIC of extreme financial dilapidation.: There isa spring
' here thit is-marvelous for the high temOorstwf Its
Water, gushing .it a... thick currentfrom the earth, at
In?? Fahrenheit. . 1
Dis..mther palatable'le drink, and
haeaiffuto somewhat similar' : to that iir a thin, rather
highly-salted beef tea... tireat crinfidene is placed , in
Its restorative virtues for' invalids : affected with rhea ,
Madan or d'inirfielm , and as an element- for bathing:it:
is Probablyi'inferlor: to none other :ter its tonic effect`.
upon the general system.: Thereaxe halting anal:dish:
inents into whiel the water from the hot spring is no- ,
ductephrOugh pipes. :To theie the . deerePit' In limb'
may be seen carried by the. score on;litters_ end hand,
elliriT44 every &if , ' The Conant .. is tt!oloinelPal place
ofresort, - and that, too , where the. gsnilug_trartsplres.
-It is fitted op in thcniost gorge:lo44lo,nd surround-:
eel with promenades, fountains,' arbors and-..walks,, that
'cotstitute In all a very plesitatintreate,,, ,---, .. •
.-- A truly beautiful work of /tie the Greek Chapel on
the Neroberg, which Was erected by the Duke of. Nes- I
sau as a limn/earn 'to MS first wife, . a Bruirdin -Frit- I
- ens . .. - The leterioils entirely of marble;-and in a pen- '
tagonsl - sense' ie.. a 'magnificent Monument to the 1
Duchess. The recumbent effigy. Is of- the purest max
"ble, and ruts cm a sarcophagus, at the side .)f which
are statuettes of the Weise d.posdes.. Dlvine -service
alba Conk-leinit.in held here every,Sunday, but the.
Priblicte not admitted. . ' . :•.. - '. '• • -
• Notbeiniveryfm - frem Me. coda of Johannisberg; ' I
and havingften Wondered wtittiewirittot that estate
1 1 / 407.
iB so, great Bollixed, and Amide conspicuona with'
erteli a won hit' difference of Price , trarri the other' 1
wines named on the lists at the hoteli, I was curious. ,
,enough to visit Johsoudeberg,.exPlore its subterranean
. m;yeteries, - and sip the daintiest Morsel trim a goblet
'of • the genuine Mean, Bested npon - a keg, with a,,
Snarl libation to Bacchus in close .proximity, , I soon
'discovered that the* atmosphere of that cavernona abode
was-ainssit as strong and spirituous as the ,meat in-a
mince-pie,' and toe
. thuch. of. that sort of thirig, you
' knew, will never do.- . My American friend, by whose
opinion tam always gelded Mauch matters, stuffed In 1
the air, sipped at the - goblet, isinacised*his live, closed'
his left eye, and looked learnedlyat the spider-webs On .
the ceiling with the right, then delivered hthiself of the
following-Tack Ilansbyen ; verdict. f--
„Either, I don't
knoW the difference betren one Inland of sour grape •
juice and another,Or" the dear; good-natured public Is
egregiouslytriutrtigged-rhud l'-'stroirglyrsuspect the:
lattet.' Batiefied on this: point. we retuned te May
e n a.,,anditten took passage on eboat lima the Rhine
for Cologne.
. . .
;At Bingen' I tried very haritto see vrhat - there tvaa '
t.isweilto sheath but the effort was iteitiese; and the •
'only tuterestinettfings Mei I•eguld -discover was the
mouse-tower, with its Wonderful legend of Bishop Rat
to all; exploded by.soine otliers, irintruarrinie writer of 1
recent date, end the r.ock . lihrenfels. Further dotifie
the sadly, beautiful Castle of -RheinStein; which As a
striung ornament in this naturally picture sent/login. , '1
1 The Mististontains a richly:decorated -11 3 1 % 1 AM Brill,lit
the , ;Ile of the tniddle ages,. and all the apartments,
With their contents, are in perfect keeping with the pre
dominant
idea. Thma follow a !accession 'of castles, I
'gifts, churches and metal villagte to, paduasob, the '
•'
anions Pfair l , and Obernesel,' When old-,wall, relieved.'
from monotonous uniformity. by battlements; knell and
*meta, presents a line scenic abet: Ai:carding to an:
dent . tradition,. then' resided once upon a time, at
Schonberg, an extensive made.situated here, seven
beautiful young ladies, whose charms had excited many'
a bloody fray among their noble suitors, and to punish . 1
them Pi their ' uelty and onrfitettery, the - ha ll oo
maideni were' cast into. the Bhine:by a stern fairy, and i l
trapeforteed into, seven coda. There` 'no doubting
this etmy, for I•esw thit rocki myself. 'Moral-Young 1
lames, don't- be charming; secondly, doOtt dirt ;. hut
witty, if you 'are charming. and caret help flirting. that'
deal, go near the vioder;soil keep. away from the Ina
-Orable fairies. Then 'Seib:ins" - talkw.deseent down the
Moe, the Lorelei, an immense iiiid foniecting ledge of '
..ingios;that leek as though they meant to hurl. them-.
.' .
`Selves Into the river 'some day* night and •figirk...:. it ap.,
- Attbis place there Is - B/1 kilo .0114 repeats itself some
sixton'timei.''.llt.Paseing the alter Of theta* order ,
eels gun to be tired; and the effect of the numerously
Irt.
~ _
_tatltued IMl'doil'nt • sm.w.wdiniilf.A o o l and:
uneeemeg.. we • now came- to Bt. Gar.. This .le a
*Malt:on, in .
it It Wei it'efiesiiird the etistete,
ittenester• -a 'traveler:cam by that wal,,to seise: ;trim .
Idis:Skarthisithiateatilithiii( itiettnfitintiiroi** !
* . spi* et iabe..aidisdi uK,;=itaiiii IMO 4034tegi .1
with Calla - MO* WlliiidOir l et:C6ll 111#4iiiiaNOriit)Bie
_
` #dfle 9111114 Irrti ',111,,04 ,1 0 1 40 116 '.C05ML0 ill) was :
**A: 11111 : 4 We st ft*Whicii thailevted aeowdthg to
:the 42411 0 0 cd, /AB gazili--Itth e le*P.4 l 4- Gi e b oia t '
the bost,Mbri haditYmiketsigko ibeafiMiatomket. -
of
lie,. ....tr/ 09 0 . 1i t kil l im. 11 :Rini thia r"
02""ttier-Pit*..loloool.rts iltriii eetme titit'
;Own 9f,MittMetter tii - recaps- diediviisi . .
0 0°P 4 itse:Va.the 'retie of the two aims .Btabert,
k 4' "
----,--- , -- - --7- - . =- 7 .. ._.
each
and Were criastantly.st loggerheads with othe4'.
tihrl Area'
:thtOtigh the A*. inacithuttions of a .tatti
'girl; but' blither, Only'remrds that the; Whole.parti
died,andthipoint of the story is it rains be Confoeiwd.
a lii* luthichatult.'7Fonigatribl, the berattild_tia
. ties of .Btolierdels, St ;Irenbreitstein mut ,Cobleraeo. are.
lamed, and.at husf, -- aftei r othefloWnit and_ ruin's and:
castles, the old Drachenfels, the grandest. rain of them
"aticrialtes it 3 ,11- , prim and :Ma* like a,.
weather-beaten Pfkiiiiiig of tiie ilia:Fier& of the ;Imo -
Aline, ttitindi there, men acing and, weird, defYlig
_the
.thanderholtaofiletmenvmul.frowningtorerthe Ingiliolk
'lntitif its parentaim: . Next :omen the city of
44i,ok,With its. heautidil enyirous. but•Mbersvise of no
I grest interest to the trivele4 save far Its excellent
[ univsmity and numerous students. -From Bonn the.
Rhine dormtin:46 s ctiuntrii that is Moriotonoue and
'.level,and we reach in a short time, the citY of.ogned
1 * T ,nißdallnaht leatrue, and that which
- liertf the are
•csibi a mistiness upon eiMyttiing 'else; by ooinfiarison;
is the cathedral. -To dm an
ribe it with y degree or
lashes World tutedellthe apace of a long letter itself.
and .I will only say that It is large enough to have built
:in Ste Interior, in the principal nave;-six ordinary shred
, churclies,,.ateepleer - and all; that it was commenced
nearly five ce.uturles ago, bat was for , along time - aban-
Adiredl . and arMitnrist4liaiiiitliftes , be:proteire — rrsea; ;
that lilt will ever be rinialeed; its. steeple will be higher.
,than any other In existence, some forty feet blifiterthnn.
bthat of Stumharg . ; Mesita
plan
altogether,
peculiar in stile, and the plan must have been an in
-1
1 ag i t ation to the genius who Molectedlt r, that I plucked
I alates rose width had grown spenttmeouiliontbstelt
of one of Ste oven bdwd towem; that igrest number of.
laborers and artisans weteWorking at this colossal Job,
co ..
singing in concert all the while . some charming - met°.
1 dy ; that it, is !uteri:arty finished. but such as It is. It
constitutes the most beautiful fragment that wasever
dedicated to Divine .worship.. About . a mile'from th e
tits .20 . Pe etiological-and botsmicni -, gardsis; *lt.
' verieuterhtt in their way,.and a greet, detd spore Coil: .
plate than I had any expectation of finding .such . luati.'
lai ii c t i m be**-. The museum In the city leaven elVird
building, end contains a great number Of old and inad
eta palmitin' beidee a . gaperiajof toterestlecaritl
401tles, citlefest among which - , are. some - very ancient
Anatiuseripte on . parchment; . illitatrated With rittalnt
looking pictures,_tip limedAf 'course.,ln the gallerythe principal consists in te old'. Cologne:
school of Wattage by Meta:ter WilheiM maxi follow
era. • The - new synagogue is' a rich effair;:glit b iriag
with cimions gilding, line frescoes; carved. WoOd-woth;
a Splendid Window With Painted again, 'and in the inte
rior Is a candelabrum. of ;solid sliver-tWweighsAllir
pounds. • At one time Cologne hid about two hundred
plows of public worahle, andwas of right-called the
city of chore/me; bat since the first French revolution,
that-Monter hag been reduced to about twenty-live:
Not the least interesting feature of thin city are the co
lOgne water establiehments; and there is greatTivalry.
between the , two lionise, Jean. Marla Perlis and Maria
Clemently ti.thmegit.they ate both of the same family.
The latter is in the ascendeLcijuat now, having recent.
ly received the best prise awarded it . the Paris Exposi-
. -
I now passed through Marburg :and Giessen, both
-flourishing towns, and the seats, of ,noted : universities,
to Cassel, the .former capital. of Nur but at
Present a dependency of Prussia. The great cinema
„zotion point of. strangers, here are the waterworks..lon the Wilhelm's Troche: These exceed. In character
and extent those of Versailles; and with the- eurround
trig associations of scenery and the noble,pabme, -con
-,atinitealtogether a superior affair: • Like nearly all the
lluropean towns and cities, Cassel 'is encircled with
- wady retreats and enticing' promenades..
,The ; old
`abandoned castle, outside of the city, that doithiless,
/ite' origin in the middle ageti, and is a stately wreck .
'of bygone magnificence, appears almost: conscious of.
_ancestral glory; and recognizes Cll3 adversity in Its .very
straightened circumstances of
: today; Statues in
hrown stone, of the old Roman- Rings and. classics
adorn.lts walls and Parapets, and throw open the, ottt.
er4lsd naked aspectof the building a somewhatidnis
ter and saidonic cast; and the mockery te, completed
by a long line Of tall spruce trees, planted,in dry goods'
boxes, that seem to stand guard around the disresu
:lied 'residence to prevent, the "atatriee from carrying it
away, felt an Involuntary sympathy with these prior
trees, intsroffering terribly from corns: and if a pinched:
uprooting can ever induce such a thing In the vegeta
ble creation, limit'.. ant sure that my diagnosis was
correct, Strolling ttningh the streeli of the city, I
Came 'lemma, sign, outside of a - barber:4lton, that ap•.
peered sufficiently amusing to mention it here. It
noted that within was an ''Ammikanische Kopfwasch
erel mit OhatnpOo;'' Anglieized--American headwreili•
ery with Shampoo.. I might have subjected mybeadto
eleangligoper.ation with probably home advantage.-
. but that sign was too much--It tilled me with terror,
and reminded me of
. Itiidshbarnan Mora father, with
'his machine:for developing phrenologicalbumpe. ,
Again on' the rallway 7 again drawn faitwardhyithe
great Motor, Aeon'. I soon arrived in the lovely city of .
Gottingen', whose acholiatie Institutions were associa
ted'-with Om dreams•of my boyhood. To .me Oxford
and Cambridge, yale and„llarverd were second-rate af
fairs ;. the only place where
,ond *gilt become truly
learned was at the university or Gottingen. Oh be
a student there, with ft 'red cap, a ribbon napes my
vest; anal , long phis i 'Dnel9 with rapters,a Rat , upon'
the cheek. to `remain -there, a mond relic threugh the
whole of life t - What bliss!—oh; what blissful ,dreara4
never to be realized I . ' •
And 'now I. approachiny native town, the,,deer, little
:Wertheim, front which Twos carried when aninfant.-.:
Tram under the cobwebs of tithe just enough of the ro
mance of an ardent nature peers forth to cause 'allttle
Palpitation. and awaken a reflective feeling of pleasere
not unmixed with 'a shade.-of :sadness. From afar otf
the only steeple of the town is visible; it belongs to,
the old chorclithathaastood-there more than -statue
dred years. To approechthat sacred. edifice Is in Im
pulse not to be resisted. • The door yields, and Ma mo ,
moat the man stands with solemn veneration. where
the infant Was - held over thchagttatnalrfont:—Were-it
- not better to drink of Me Watera of tethe, and forget
all of the interial between theSe iwo °cessions , Pad
knoWs 1. God only knows t . • Cl'. H, •
rilclal.L-Psani Birosirtox, 166t.L-Adviiies Just
received by, mail. nable na.to announce Dositlvely, that
the oNLY GOLD 31XPAL far American sewing machines
was awarded to Bites Bowe, .Jr.,:as the mannfactnrer
of the best smiling machine that was exhibited. There
were: eighty-two :different machines in competition'
for the. prize, and ?dr. Bowe received the addition
al avian} .of • the Cross of the Legion of Honor.
as rgAllaitellier and inventor. The exact wording of
the sward leas - follows , - • - - •
Howe Maounre.. I, Wtrartica•
~ , c o.operateur Elt a a f "Wheeler
Howe, Jr.; .'pr . omoteur de Ipouria machine h bontoh
lathsthine-a cOndre:"MX. Mers: — NTSBLItIX Tear.'"
Toe list Of , Blom who were „made Knights of
the Legion of Honor, as pnblisbed in the Paris papers,.
reads thns':--"Morm.. VMS eanarosarr
nounias woonorin, EXPOS/Orr :. 0 4bich translated into
English, reads: "Mr. Blias,...noWe, Jr., maker of. Sew
ing machbus. exhibiting." • - •
From this it will be Seen that tile meaal aviardectto"
Wheeler &Wilson' was .for a "Buttonhole Machines"
slid not for Sewing 'Maclaine. • '
Bactrof these world-renowned .machines bears-the
medallion head of Bliss BoWe..Jr,, (trade.TOrk,)
with
out which none are genuine. • Messrs. Sibley & stoops,
Agents, No. 9.82 Cheatnut street, Philadelphia.
„August 8; , OT -* - - - • 111-4 t
At LAWES, ' • '
'Piffles from all parts of thet a States 'cOnsult. Dr. A.
M Ifaurleeau, Professorof Diseases of Women, whose,
great and successful remedies, specially adapted for,
their ailments: . are known throughout the country. •
grent . expe4ence and. skill, derived from over so
piars successful practice, devoted -exclusively to - .the
treatment of the Diseases of Women, especially as con
-nested with the married state, has given ladles the ut-,
mak; 'cOntiden to" consult:lmi, either by lett:nil* in
person, and be acanied of piOmpt relief in all cases. ' -
.111 s celebrity is known to over. half a million of -la, ; .'
dies, ea the anther of
~ ,T he Married Woman's Private
Medical Companion' , . designed specially' for'married
ladies, in delicate or precarioni health from Atngerons
confinement, describing syraptome, wane and man
dies: Price $1); .".
MPeeittl Tictitce t0 . ./Ilterried
SLiedies.4:Wee who snfferYtom - - obatenctiods
oratein constant agony for ay tnpntUe,r
preceding windneuent,"or :have difitallt,.tediiins' and
dangerous deliveries, Whose . lives are hitzardeuelitiring
:suckihnO4ill find the:: " •
PoritiguilEfemftle
mesteionderfal, reliable andneztain rernedy...
Thottaands of ladies use them with infallible
to all case's :of atoppage Or Irregularity,' or .inpores
slon of =tore from whatever ranee; they are eertahr to.
succeed, aniare, besides, PerfectlY liealthi. They are
scientifically prepared Of costly and rare
They, cannot call. • In' recent cases they - succeed in
-ftirty.elght boars. -*lce, $3 per bor..*.' In *obstinate
cases, those two degrees 'stronger Should be used.—
Price, $5. Address, Int. A. M. MAURICEAII, •
• ' Professor otillseases of:Women.
. • • . Office, No. 129 Liberty'St., New York.
. . .
' sole Agent and Proprietor for npwards . of twenty.
years., They are Sent by . mail, in , ordinary, letter tm
velopei, free from observation with . fell instructions
. . ..
- IS, amities, dee:titling iymptoiret . ceases, and his:-
special remedies for married ladles, (intended onci for
wives and husbands . ) will be sent free by enclosing a
postage stamp to above address. . .1 : , -
A - Lady wirites..Dr. A. M. ItflltriCefill, "Sir: I
haFetried many • things I Saw advertised, ;pH is,.
. and powders without benefit. A lady' who, hadheen
sticcessfully treated by you, Emoted me that you would
be certain to afford me railer, sho wed me "The Mai:
! r t i t i tiftem in rcas 'alti e v etac e li eui dt. 4 42 6l-4 1 " gii i tZt hi eV3 1^
sent to you, and received by return= mall, the "Portu7.
• geese Female Monthly Pills," which acted , like inuSlin•
relieving rue in slew daya.wittioat. the. least MCDUTe ,
- -
.niente.r --- —-. Ifuly 9.0,.,61.-29-ani
MRS:
hL , SgEi 4; 11:10 . 3111AL • - •
\:. , 2 1 _ 1 2 , 5gt kviaolian imam' aarmeore
• For correlenoy And debility. Stockings.
Trußaes,Sboulder,Bracela.and • all other a dlianeee'for
aridbildreu.. 2118:14.- ESTEC: ST.;
above. RA= July 13. Tel 28-tl9
-
, .
Moil] fend Vieeles. , '
The only.relisble remedy for those ; brown discolors=
none tnithe face
PLlR celled-Moth Patches and Freckles ls
Pseer's MOTU alai KIL lATION. Prepared only
by Dr. B. e. Press ; DenatltalwiSt; 49 Bond Street,
Pfew.Torit„ Sold by Alt Drogelste in Pottsville. and
elsewhere. Price $l per bottle. -July
Deafness Blindness and Catarrh, treated
with the utmost aticcesaV & lSAMOS, Id. D., Oman
and Aurbst, {formerly of s• Rollank) 51S
PINE Street, PIITIASKI , Taitimonialti from*
the moat reliable sources In the City and Connitl can
se Been at his office. The Becliad factilty.tire invited
to accompany their patients, as he hallow Berea in his
N practice. ARTWICIAL ETES without pain'.
o charge for examinatiom Miry 4, MT-14-10u1 •
EBROBB OF VOIITIE '
A Gentlemaa who suffered for year from Nervous
Pmmature Decay. and all the effects of youth
ful indiscretion, will for the eralceof suffering humani
ty,' amid free to an wiaa'needit; the' recipe and dlree-
Demo for, making the simple =remedy by which be was
eared. Sufferers wishinaloprott -by the advertisers
03:perience, can do so by eddretudnff. ta perfect we
dame; JOHN B. 0G01.M. 42 , Cedar Street,New York;
- ICE VIIBOLD'S
CONCEIMUTED FWD
• • . •
mataDionfris Eatirrrit. uwitiarmr4-
Tonom.„ Nom, kris, Erstanos;SoLsz, Ant Eitur
itdrinio dialler° Me ippearaneey riaanre the
Meta of mereary.and remadog all - taints, the rem
nants of &sneak, betedPhay or otoicim„ , and la . Mind
by anmas and conntOor irith'peffe4 saverr. • -
_Two Tastzeroonatme cdtheNztraot of Saymparina.
11464 to pint of 'Water, ht , equal to the LSO= Diet
Dtinla; and one bottle to equatto a gillint of the Syrup
of SionapartWor the &melon" se nanny made.
, Anlamanammol.nennans vestleted' in the Keen..
eMnorgicat Review:M the . added of .the Snout of
banammilla tartableffectiocue. by Beniamht f rravent.
g, gpeaklng"of-thane Mauna, ado diseases
analog from the eanew..of merourAt - ba elates that no
.tmay M agog ,to the Netraet of Finsapsdllat
t o w e r i s er t z salway;,2matir ect, thalt.igarother /
im acquainted' WM."- , It, WM UM' !Melded, tams% a
tindoiritb this invelnaldeMiteltade,4o,..itio-4Applim.e
bIIB 611 d gate of ttalartmano Waken, and L yet 11101iri•'
table mrzendera'nat9r oullstioM 3l Pr the tint 04 16 .
unavailable
. .
Take Time my the fOrelock..
.The miassun Which'genera''''' ten - egideml. _ e fevers 15 now
rising in cloud' a under- the blisinglbearim of the dog
dair sin. peer ° y. living Ody, inr.Well is refuse animal
azu4'YegetWimalter, emits rinwbolisioute vapors, and
inprowdod clidei and_ the 'dense _ansemblages which
imsiness arid pleasure call. together the elements of
. dikl . ,MS awe:volved. , The .pressure upon every vital
aiganThi never an . .great aa in the second and third.
riionihsptiruLemer, and coalman sense teaches .cn that
these organs requirS to be reinforced to meet Lt. . .
5 1 Wilold Onitseitisi.hhiiMin*-rm alepatring lease.;
and this is the worn when the promo of dilaplds•
' Lion is most rapid and . -repairs are. most ...required.— .
. Therefore build up,. . prop and _sustain. the powers of
name with that' - mighty. vegetable_ reetipersult, 110* '
.TETTER'S..BITI'ERS. He whotakos it may be said
tfietlithe himeelf Ip tts!! 4*ra
,fii4 t agglioi which °Pi'
itereo Oeal3ep will hart , its 'poisened . , 1555 es in iralm-:.
'This iS no gratultees asserthm 'but n great medical
feet attested by twelve MISS' egierience in every di
`mate of the habitable globe. Extremes of testmers- -
ture always disturb the functions of the stornach, the
-bowels, Ate liver aid , the , skin... - It 15 through these
that the most dangerous maladtis assail ns. Tone,
def yn:ln a4v*r.p. with 119
,Vricit'4, Wilms. aad
bat 'and . m . .tii4Ai. ''' ' . - .'• -.--- ' - ' . 3oe r -'.. .'''
, • . ~
Ladies' Trusses, Supporters* Blastießabdiges,
Belte„ Sinetlngis, 'Knee Cape Bannhirs, & 'nett%
• Braces, Shoulder and greeter Beane% VOA
French. aW German Rupture . Ihneas, WinVe‘
In
greet variety. &n &e., attrEIMLUI. on.Twelfin
drat door below•Jlace. PHILADELPEILL'—:(TIde De-•
pasianant eumineted exenalvely - for Fetnalea , and
Midren;by tompetent ladled, and the stock Is adant
.ed to their special menta.l adlueting our Wawa.-
ealltemedies we correct conattudlon, TAW
"case and comfort. t' • - . •
Organized by the Proprietor, : •
0.,'8-: NICED IBB, •
• Proitsehnud adynder ofTraste: k ate..
cor i nernf tattpltutßAPß , &WWI P_
... . . _
• "-
. .
CLatii Kir.vs, for'Baron, fired% Sidi:MlN
salt Men* Som. Broicen ,Breaste, Frost. Bites, Chll-'
'Wass, BMWs. Brutses,`Citti, *other ,
opoit man br-berist ttiost wonderful:it:Ode ever.
irroditeed. Other good articles Ovate: this cores. - -
It Snips ititle t nixastion, subilee, pat 4, and. heals atjth- -
oat ascar. It id worth ila svetilit In gold to any
ry, and . ebonid alwaYs tie oc band. It to .retreated to
Add wrist 41. says every time:
.
Noffatra Life Pllkpad Pheili Miters
were first need in private practice In 1925. They were
introduced to the public in 1835, since which time their
reputation Os e atended,Viitif they, have a. sale.in cr
ows of all other Cathartic 'and Purling
Mien is. hnveLlY: ithwililly among .rivilized nations Who
have not personal evidence of their Wattle' eiferis.- -
.Their great seeress is owing to their nntfgrm reliability
in cases of Constipation; Bilious and StORACYLC Difie*
Bac whether of long - or short duration.. They are co
tirelyvegetable in their composition, and, luirmless to
the gentiesidnia ingredient ripens pores of
the skin; =Other is diuretic, and, stimulates proper
action of the kidneys . ; a-third is emollient, leceening •
phlegm and humor from: the lungs; other - - properties
' are warming end cathartic; and Cleanse. the -stomach
and bowels [rem unhealthy secretions. Their com-
bined effect is, to regulate the impaired fanctiona Of the
oystem, and to produce netp.rn. It is nit, asserted
Mofiatt's Pills are a ouns,,a.i.i.--that they will: coreall
complaints—but. under - ordinary circumstances the
may be relied upon' to cure Nervous. and Sick Read
ache, Costiveness, I;:ryeuxilpsiii, Indigestion, Jaundice;
Liver and Bilious Complaints,, Colds, Scurvy, .erni•
Weakness; They; are expressly made for these.
diseases. Millions upon millione of cures can be cited ,
In no single Instance has a eainplaint ever came to cur
knowledge where' they have 'not .eperated as recom
mended.''. -
The printed circular around each. box fully explains
the symptoms and effecta of each' disease; specifies
tregment, fundabee evidence, - • - • =. • •
We briefly refer to liev. David 'Rider, Franklin. N
C., who was cured of Dyspepsia. 'C. R. Cross, of The- -
-cake, 111., cured - of liver Corapfaint, HoOley, off
Springfield,:Pa., had Scrofitia, and had - to rise crotehea:
was cured In three weekx James D. Dolens, of Adrl.-
- an, MO., lured of'.Bilfonp.Fever. Rev. Refill gra ,
ham, Prestiteritua Church, Gananagna, Cal., of - Fever,
arid Ague. Twenty-first.NeW tork.
of Rheumaiiim and Plies of 26 years. standing. Rev.
Samuel DOWlera, Editor of the SPOligileld (tined tie-
L Publican, was, cured of terrible Costiveness.. Ron. Ed.
Webber, of Rnmney, N. of Liver Complaint, etc.
A box of M.ofilit'a.Life Pills,_with toff circulars,
will be sent gratis to any Physkian, or Clergyman.' on
the receipt of two three cent postage stamps.
Moffat a Life,Pills are 15 cents per bor. Moffat , a
[.. : Plicenix Bittere, $1 per bottle. , They are sold by all re
speetabbrdealers 'throughout the continents and the
• •
islands of the ocean. • _ • .
. WRITE &•EtOWLAND_, Proprietors,
Successors to Dr. John Moffat and Dr. Wini.B. Moffat,.
• • 1.41. Liberty street, New York.
9-Ifeow.
March '4..07
. . _
Laxowrze Coace.is. will
force Whiskers - on the smoothest_ lace, or astir on
Bald Beads. Never known. to fail. ' Sample sent for
IO ete. itddresißEßVßS..b 78 Nassau St., - New
Yoik:. . . June 29, '6T-20.ty .
Itch Itch 1 , Scrattch no Itlore
• • .. .
SWAYNE'S OINTMENT •
.• . .
Cares the most obstinate cases of Totter, Salt Rheum,
' Scald Head, all Eruptions.
Warranted a quick and sure mire. It 'allays s all itch
ing nt once is paint) , vegetable can - be used on the
most tender infant. ' : - . • '
• ~ .Cures Itch In from 13 to 48 hours.. •
k'SWANNEISOINTMENTICaren '
, • „ , Irca ,
'SMAYNE , S OINTMENT ,
"SWAYNE'S OINTMENT ,
"SWAYNE'S OINTMENT" j
"3WAYNES OINTMENTI
SWAYNE'S OHNITMIMT
'3WAYNE'S OINTMENT . '
"SWAYNE'S OINTMENT , "
."SWAYNE'S OINTMENT!
"SWAYNE'S OINTMENT ,
',MAYNE'S OINTMENT'
"SWAYNE'S
, lIPTAYNK'S OINTMENT"
-“SWKS.'NE , 'S atmaorr
"SWAYNIMOINTEYNT
' , SWAYNE'S OINTMENT
Trice 60 cents. -.Bysend!'
Son, 330 North SixthStrec
be sent _free of postage, to - a
Sold by ITERRYShYLOI
a 1 best Druggists everywhi
. .
GREY HAIR, BALDNESS:, DANDRUFF,
. .
• ANY D1137.45ZE 'OP THE . 1304-1 ,13 . • •
-
NO DISCOVERY - eon COMPARE' witak •
"London Hair Color Restorer and Dresaing."
"London. Hair Color Restorer and Dressing."
.. "London Hair Color Restorer and Dressing."
• . (Invaluable as a dresser and beautifier.)
"London". • "Hair Color Restorer."
"London" " .011 r Rem - "Hair Color Restorer." -
"London" • • -"Hair'Color Restorer...
"London" Physician s "Hair Color Restorer."
"London" , ..., . '' .- • . "Ear Color - Restorer."
oOdon" . ..Vie ,sind "Hair C,olor Restorer,"
London"_ -. , • . "Heir Color Restorer ," "London" Recommend "Hair Color Restorer."
"London" -,- . - - "Hair Color "Restorer,"
"London" ••- - - , It. . : "Hair - Color Restorer,m;
'!London" - • •-• .. "Hair Cokir Restorer."
This, together with the Sopron' of all who use
'. "London Hair Color Restorer-and Dressing,"
nieces it -far beyond comparisor, with any -other Hair'
Restorer eyerlntroduced to the Araeritan'peoplei It
'never fails to impart life, growth and vigor to' the
weakest hair, fastens and .stops its falling,'and is sore
to produce P. new gym*, of hair, tensing it to grow
'thick end Czong. It IsWarranted to contain nothing.
.•" ' ' is Deep .Not 'Dye the Hair, ' .
'But acts as a- stimulant and tonic, to the organs, and
'tills them with new life and- coloring -matter. Dry,
-harsh, dead,' or disnalored -- appearance of the hair is
changed to, instrtmer ' hint and beautiful locks. The •
- seraph' kept clean, cool, ana'healthy , and dandruff ef-- -
.
' fectually cured: . ' . - " - •
1 .• Only 15 cents a bottle %.: six bottles, $4. Address or
' dem to DR. SWAYNE 45 SON, 330 North Bluth street,.
'Philadelphia. _,..• ' ; ... - • ' - • • -.; •
•
Sold by "HENRY ISAYwE, _Druggist, Pottsville, an ti
. by.all beet Druggists and Variety - Stores. " •
April 27„!§1.. ~ -. . • . :. ,..; _ _ IT: _
[\-G COLGATE &Cal
() 4 5: - GFAIMAN
t 4 C0. 16
ERASIvE SOAP
c`'irlo4k.-
May IR, '6l
cpmsum[pTUVlii
The advertiser, having been restored to health in it
few weeks by a Very simple remedy, after-having scat
tered for several years with a severe lung affection, and
that dread disease Consumption—is anzione to make
known to.his fellow-sufferers the means of cure; .1
: To all 'whotesirelt, he will send a awl of the re
icription need (free of charge), with the directions for
. preparing and - using the same, which they will rind
Iffita urea tor CONERIMMION, Asrnxa, )3110NOMTIS,
COOGXII4.,OOI.ph axid all Lang and Throat Affections.
The only - object of the advertiser in sending the Pre
scrittionis to benefit, the afflicted, and spread 11-forma--
tion which he conceives to.bo invaluable, and he hopes
ever; sufferer will try his remedy, as ft will cost them
..nothing; sad may prove a blessing. :Parties wishing
PreSeCiPtion , rasa, by return ma, will - geese ad
.dreew _EDWAIXI) W lIIZON,
_
Willianuibiug, 'Sings cow New York.
May 1& .R 7.
every men should roanl,:—.
Whynverj woman should 'marry.: - 1,11 may. marry - to
know.' Read the Illustrated Marriage Guide and
icalitdviser, by W2L.IIARL, M D.,200 pagea.-Malled
In Sealed envelopw on receipt of 25 cents. Address 12
White Street, New Tort.. • . June 22-25-3 m.
The Heeling Pool, and HOnse 017Merey. • How
ard Assoebition Reports for Young Men. on the Crime
of Solitude;and the Errors. Abuse. and Diseases which
destroy the Manly .powers, and create mapodtments to
Marriage, with sure means of relief. Sent iti sealed
letter envelopes: - free of charge. Address Dr. J.
EiKILLIN SOUGHTOII,' Howard Arsociatton,' , Phila
delphia, , • • r Only 2T. 'CT. 30.1 y
SOIII3NOIEta •11tAltDRAIIE PILLS.
, .
A Substitite foir Calomel.
•
- These Pill are toraposed of TllllOll5 coots. having
the power to relax the .secretion of the liver u
promptly and effectually as bine pill Co mercury, - and
without producing any of there disagreeable or dant..
brows &recta which often follow the use of the latter.
In all disorders thus Pills may be used with
confidence, ae they promote the discharge of vitiated
bile, and remove thcee'obstmetions from the liver and
isilliary ducts, which is the tattoo of Minorca abalone
• SCIIECNDIPS MANDRAKE PILLS care Sick Head
ache, and all disorders of the Liver, indicated by sal
-1611 okinc4PatOd tongue, costiveness, &mines% and
sip:hand feeling of weariness and lasslixide, showing
that the liver le in a torpid or obstructed.cfnulition. '
short:HM4o7lll3 maybe used"Witit adiattage
ID
• • • calicin is
&Leases ,when a p u rgative orslterstlVe rn e
I quire& • _ _ _
• Pleaseask fur Dr. Muck% ifutdrakis -
Obeelire that the . hm likenesses of the Doctor are on
the Ogivexansent stamp-tee When in ,tbe last stage o'
Consumption. sad the other in his pretust -health
t3old by all - Druggists and dealers. ' I,rice 25 gents
per box. Principal °alte r Nc:slsNOrtli atii Street,
Philadelplda, Pa:,
Wholowle `agen ts : Mesita 13cirnea cit:Ceo
. • General ,
21 Park Row, New York; B. Manse, 108 Balihnore
lioltbmwe, Md.; JohnD.Park, H. B. car. of Fourth
and WalutSL, Cineinnati, Ohio;' 'Maker & Taylor; .
134 sisid.lss. Wabash Avenne; Dideago, 1114 Dal=
)1 1 01nniss Winthivest tier • • of Second wad Meets.,
P'!•: -1,- 5 4 4 111 9.:1 . ' No! :11.?..1Y
Nevig Use Bilson for thcee boo bleelc ~no of
tales, tttot, oo torment maut sad _
' -- D.T4VOWERS
- laßTNlZttit pm-Km= •
igwer wsi
imissnons, Which mac
Tbere i eittithirit 11 4"
96*
Saanvan #caoot, Ustox of Pottsville
will meet. in the 2:ct Tresbitirian Church on the
&rat biondaq inS9tember.
- PA&gmont, Sect,
• " • ...• NOTICES.:,
.
• Cbureb_r second St, 'move
Markel.-Rev Baweecuy Moon. -D. D.. Bider_ ser
vicA.
es: Sabbath , at 10, A. M.:, and TM, P. M. - Prayer
MeetinA. 'Tuesday evening, at TM o'clock.
• Vrigattliab va*. C
Lutheran. hurch,
Marketiksuire, Re E v_ U. Gasmis, Pastor. Services
Sabbatirmornlngat'lo o'clock ; -Evening, 7m.. Week. •
ly Lecture • and yrayer Meeting, . Thursday et cninitsi
T o'clock..
Firlitriammelietal :Church; Caliawbill street.—
Rev.- S. -&. Canso, _Pastor, • will - preach German ev
ery Satlday, morning at 10 o'clock, and English . In the
Evening at. TM 'o'clock. Baddenee Marker street
above loth.. . • . •
traded PrtiVer Fleecie eterl Bragg
triorning,trom 8M to tim' o'cloc.k, the _ _frame Church
on Second Street, between Market and 'Morivogiszi &B
-AH are invited; •
war Germans Beformeu Church, Market St.,
Rev, J.• C. Buoura. Pastor. Regular moniing servlCes,
I alternately, in the Gentian and English language!, at
r• 10 o'clock. • . - • -
kTne German Services occur at 10, on.the 25th
ni•Julyr-theltilvend 95th fof August;theach Sa Bth and
24d Sept.: All other aerrkes—including eb
bath evening, at -o'clotit, are -held In the English
- Prayer Meeting:aid Udine, , Thursday _exam_
ing T 3% o ' clock. • • •
• - or First Presbyterian VII nreb, comer Ma.
bantam* and Thitd. Streets. Rev:
Is
Slum Pas:
tor.' Salaam - St:any 10)4 A. M. andlm Lee
_ tan; Itemalay evening- at TM P.M. Prayer Meeting
9.45 A. IC :Sunday S ch ool, sp. M. 711i.etoes reilldenco
MorritrAcldition. •• -
.13rSeeolatir-PresisTtertatt itiFget-
Square. PaitOT,Relr: TIZENTI&S de 41117. nelduetiCe
209 Mahe:Menge --street.. Services. - tom A. M.. and
.P. 11.• Lecture' Thnniday evening 8 o'clock.. Sabbath
iSchrel Miring the ',hot weather) 9A. M. Strangers
corplidtv bryited to all - the services. •
„ .
RERSEWS MAKBLE,WORKS
Kokantblisbed in 1833. -
Mrs. Reeser would respectfully MI nocoatzto . the pub
lie that she sill continue the Marble Works, at the old
stand, corner Callowhill and Second Streets, !near
Market 4 Pottsville. . . .
Constantly on hand all kinds Of •
Cures ITc nne Pam 1 • -cp • ~,,
°mixt Trrnat
'Curai SALT Ras -1m
Cates 8!3 thrAD
ellree:BAlWZßi e /7Cn
Cares ltnvo Wolois 1
CUM ALL Sara Diarasia
gBo cents to Di. !Wayne do
Philadelphia, a has will
addiesav, . •
' praggiat, and
-- (April 20, 'IF! . 1 T
Is inanntactured from PVBZ
Tamale, and may be' considered
the Si.lrroAra or Exost,Lero:r.--!
For Sale by all Grocers.
arretsvairri
stligiono guttilionce
rVilUZ4 l gla.
w -
Marriage Notices mood .4M. accompanied tea
to appear is the Totromlik
• DAVIS-MIIDET-rHy Hev..N. •Walsh, on August •
Bth, le f. H. SE Davos of hilneorvillei to MARY
datmhter or P. F: bfadey of.
SCHINKItH-WALSH-On Thursday evening. AlUt.
B.lB6j'st:the residence of the officiating' minister,
Rev- Johti.P. Leib. Schuylkill. Haven, CRAWS W.
Scuiszaa to Hum TUIRXBA Vi'AL/314 • both of Patsville.
•
TAYLOIt--NORGAN- tho 6th. (nat. by
-jotteph McCool, Jamas TAYLOR of Wadesville and MAIL,/
AIM MOSIGAAI of. Washington Township, Schuylkill
DIED.
Simple annountements of deaths. fre 4 nose cto
eompanietheith notices; &es., must be paid tw at the
rate of 10 cents per line,
BORDEIt--Ocr the 311 of August, of apoplexy, at the
residence of his son-In-law, Idichael Weaver. la
'
nersville, NICUOLAS Boansa, an old inhabitant of this
County, aged 7S years and alx months.
HINTERLEITHER.-00 the sth inst - , in Pottsville
Pamrates, son of Her. O. A. and ,Maria Ilinterleinner,
aged 11 months and 11 days,
HUCKBY--On the 29th of Jaly, in Port C 49 linton, Re..
exam -wife--of Samuel - Hockey, -rigid- - years, 11 -
months and 3 days. • •
EILDIII3I3I6.ND-On the SOW of Jalyi-In Port Car•
boa ANNA. jtAltu, daughter of William ankMaria Hil
debrand, aged 7 months and 26 days.
BAGRNBUCII-00 the 11th of July, near Drehers-,
vllle, CLUIVIS Lotns, son -of _Benjamin 1...: . and Sarah
Ylsonbuch, aged 1 year, 5 months and 10 days. •
' •
HIINTZDNORB. Ogthe &king., in Pottsville, SAW.
MEL Unary/40ra, Req.; aged 66 years, 9 months and 10'
days.:,
relativ . eatind frlithla of the family are respect.
kill Invited to attend his funeral from bli late rest
-dance, corner of Centre and eallovrbiii streets, to-mor
row. (Sunday,) at 2 o'clock in the afternoon, withoat
farther notice. To proceed to Odd Fellows'„Cemetery.:
MAURIS-On the evening of-the Sth Inst,-Enwitt -
W., Infant son of Edwin and Louisa 'Harris, aged 13
months. - -
The relatives and friends-of - the family- are respect-.
tally invited to attend the funeral: from the residence
•of his parents, Minentville, this (Saturday) afternoon
at 3 o'clock.: . • - • • '
litiRNS--On the 30th of July, In St. Clair. Taro
rajas BMWS, eldest. son at J, S. and ,Mary Ifahnto
aged 10 years, 9 months and S days.
MATTRN-On Tuesday - morning last, Cauca,
youngest son of Henry and Elizabeth Meilen, aged 3
months andla days:- -; •-• .
MOHR-In Mohrsville, Befits Co., 6n the 6th of Au
gust, IsAiko H. Mona, aged 00 years. . • •
MORRISON-On the Tat inst..tit Plne Forest Ebert,
near St. Clair, 31.4xxima. - wife of John M. Morrison, and
daughter of - the late Henry Hoffman, is .
the 37th year
of her age. - - •
• ••
Many the changes since last we met, •
Blushes have brightened and- tears have been wep t ;
Friends have been scattered like roses to bloom, -
Some at the bridal; some at . the tomb.
- - ,
Joya that we've tasted may sometime return,
But the torch when once wasted, ah, how-can it barn
Splendors now clouded, say when will ye shiner
Broke ht ttre - go
and wasted the -wine - •
I stood in Yon chamber, but one was not there, • -
Hashed werethe late-strings, and vacant the cyair ;
Lips of love's melody, where are ye borne, •
Never t 3 smile again, never to mourn?
• SMITH—At Hamburg, - Berks County, ou the 3d
Inst., Issasu Stirs, aged 42• y ears. . •
•
. .
M SA O 2 TI A C . E Y. — Mew i m ll e m m e h eetr e a to t f h e ls i a nfkOin LCo dUgi.l
.
Sunday at 1 o'clock, P. M., preparatory to attending
the funeral of the late SAMUEL - 111.7.VZINGER., Sae.
The_cratt In general are. Invited to attend.
By order of the W.M.
• •Ili0.1&„ litlLLEtt, Sao'
Or Brethren will appear In Masonic dreta. 3i 11.
0 .0 • §
-•••.:
. . 4
co • 4 . 4 •
0.;
• !
Monuments . Stones.
Enclonurea, Mantles, Bureaus, Table and Washstand
Work executed in the beat style of art and warrant- .
ed to give eatiafat arm. , March 80, 'Bl.-12.4y.
g• : ________ , - - I
Also PinalliVaults ramie. to* oraer.. Work of era',
description.promptly executed in the hest style, and
warranted to give satisfaction.. • .
• Plans and designs tarnished at theahoitinvotice.
• Ang 18, , C 6-8- . • -MRS. 'I,IIWIB-RlS,Ealift.
.AI,EX:ANDER,
,AIORRIS,
KEYSTtiNE MARBLE WORp;
CORNER HECOND , A ND LEWIS STS.,
=MtSlaitMla, PP, MOYLVAIIIA.
TomOtontakaf American and itallan • 341.rb1e from $ 0
March 2,8 T
::PATRICK COM EFO.IID,
. . .
•13213 Ft. , •
Aridiiitia;i In all sortf of CEDAR
WARE, • • • . . • -
' 196 Centre Street, rottsville..
Inventor of new and economical WINE PRESS';
also of the new and Ingenious spiral motion CHURN
. Pr - Orders respectfully solicited.
" am is.
THEODORE
. .
MANOY/LOITOLIM OF
.
' • And Wholesale and Retail Dealer in
SILT, 114L11115T .a'RONEIFOOD , 00IILDINEIS,
Look!ngrotas. and Picture Frames,
• CR„STAK POTTSVILLE%-:
r's nnilnyres .2rt noon;
FIF-Repitrilig & Regildirg done At fhachorte ' stNotice.
'Sept U. '66 • • . 3841 t .
Buf‘c* -
..NANuFAcToinr.--The., ender
purposes gned have entered IntoCo.partnershlp: for the
ot manntactraing Brick; and are prepared to
fa parties with a good article in large or email
quantities to silt purchasers. 'king situated on the
Mine Railrea we are. prepared tO ship to any
point.. & S. RICH,
Jab! 13-2S4m Sncceeeore to Samuel Amen:
fIaIf.PEIANS , 11CODRT siALlE.—Ptirenant to .3-
an order of 'the orphans. court of the County of
Schuylkill, in the Goinmonwealtb of Pennsylvania, the
Suhecribem, Administrator* of the estate of John Reed,
late of the Borough of Pottsville, in
Schuylkill, deceased, will. expose to sal th e e ,
Co public
vendue., on . • -
Saturday, - August 24, 11467, _
at 2 o'clock In the aftemOon, et the Union Hotel, to -
the Borough of Pottsville that certain three-sto
ry brick. dwelling house and IT of ground, situate iu
the Norwegian addition to the Borough. of Pottsville
aforesaid, on the - northwardly side of. Railroad - street,
hounded and described as follows t Beginning at
a post, a corner of lot marked No.l76„thence
by it north 11 degrees 85 minutes.west 330 feet
to a post at the scrathwardly side of 4 80 feet wide
street; thence along it south 1 , 9 degrees and 85 Mill
utes;.woet ferfeet" to - a' •poitt thence by lot 1.10.1.1 9
mouth 11 degrees and 95 mantes east 330 feet to Rail
road street aforesaid : thence along.it north TB degrees -
and 35 minutes, west 65 feet to the place of beginning, •
being lot N 0.117. Late the estate of said deceased
Terms and conditions madelcnovm at the - time an.l
place of sale by DANIEL ABED
. • • ciIARLES REED,
Administrators:
Biota! of the (hThaes , Court, -
Anoint 8, , 6T 33..3t -clause-McGee, Clerk,
NEW • STEAM. SAUSAGE NSCHINE , .
tit:OltutAlEß, Butcher,
, • . . •,
•710, ,
301 Centre • Street, POTTS I 7ILLE,
.'• • . COProsers rua cite Town HALLO
Returns thanks to his nurneranteustomers for then- ;. b -
entlemige In the Peet, and solicits a continuanof ce.
Rehm enlarged Lis operations by the intfodnct'on
Into his business, of a new steam sausage machcce.—/
He vrill ometnuelcikeeps on bantrthe. hest quality of
'det, Ram. Elausageli ao.
s blisbelittles for; malting manage are much is
.creased by Me use of the stearn— machine, be is "re..
m ed a :i to mate sausage to order,- promptly and eFei
. • 'T6 dealera 'who tattithithe sausage by wholesale, s
liberal discount will be made. .. . 90.4 f
' July 2 . 1 ) , MT •
R Y :Jerda '— dt. B 74
:Tay la Centre St, Morris' Addit on.
lot
ofClll:B7llMit!ivi
D, 3, RIDGWAY & %ON,
COAL COMMISSION DIEIICHANTgi
pardwe for spy parties wishing any- kind ai
Dasl musion lan idl ed l in be ftb eilar ayl ged kill . County. A reasona , b s “:: -
D; J. RIDGWAY cto
BRIG - 1.1 & Co.,
FAIBBAN • 'S StALES.
OF ALL D
Cha Hsaa.arOK •
•-.
:GEORGEW. SLATER ,
Real-Estate Ali ria couveggicen
.0114,1016rToiva a
01:11ding, ad Sue ,
—,_013/110“411, Lands, boutht, sohl and ren
axw°4lsll tO ale totalots ociaaderaners. Der's
ifixteg". &MI 9144tCoulat, w 63441
A 1 1 1 0 1 , 71 .
- • -
00-4
X '
a* Ix ,
M
P.
5 4 o
VC ,
E' gt
and upwards
Pottsville, Pa.,
L D.: • lONS
itfiteluirer" PriC
syl _