The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, August 17, 1867, Image 3

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    Miutto' Mound.
POTTSVITAF, PA.
5.4 TEEIDAIGLUGVBT 17,_1587.
- NION STATE TICKET.
, FOR SUPREME JUDGE.
lion. HEMS if. MIMS, of Pittsburgh.
71TDGE SHARSWOOD ON LEGAL
TENDERS.
•
Eltractfrom INN Opinion id the Case or
- Boric TS. Trott.
•
i•Ori the whole, then, I am of opinion that the.
provision of . the act of-Gongireas of February 25th,
1: 4 2, declaring the notes maned in pursuance of
that act to be lawful money, and a legal lender, IS
rsinNsTITIITIONAL, ".
-This renders ittmecessary that I Should con
eider the other question which has been made, as
to the effect of the special agreement .to pay, in
lawfol rilvcr money of the 'United States. I am
in favor of entering judgment for the plaintiff,
hnt as the majority of the court are of.a different
iipinion, judgement for the defendant."—iflopted
from tne Philade/phia Age of 23d .of February, -
"1,51, where the opinion is published in full.
It may also be found in the Legal Inteliigencer
of March 18, , 1864, page 92. • '
In the same copy of the Age is s carefully pre
pared eulogy of the judge, and this opinion, in
which is the following :
"Judge SITAR:WWOOD reasons 11p0n and decides
the cane as if he were some lofty spirit sitting far
above and out of the contentions and strifes of
the world.".
Will not the holders of greenbacks andlGoverg- •
merit bonds consider the judge as quite too ele
vated and etherial for such earthly honors as %kelt
on the Supreme Bench?
FOR A CONVENTION
TO AMEND THE STATE COMM= wrION
. .
We raise the above Banner, and intend fighting it
onl on this line. ...• .• • . •
We propose in the Constitution, increasing-the min
ter of Representatives to 400. and Senators 100, limit
ing the session to 40 days with pay at $a a day. • .The
Representatives to be elected from, single districts
.throushont the State. ; • .
Pass a general lawler all corporations' beyond the
reach of individual enterprise, amino special laws.
All corporations with an income nor exceeding .$2.15,-
oto, to be granted by the courts. .
--
For the balance of the busineei of the Stile, 40. and
in fact, 00 days, Would be sufficient for all the legisla
tion the people require. This is the only plan tO break
. up the present corrupt system, because large bodies in
abort sessions are not so liable to be corrupted.
Union County Convention.
The Members: of the Union Party of Schnylidll Cow
tv, and all others opposed to southern rebels and their
northern sympathizers ruling the land which they at
tempted to destroy during the recent . Rebellion, and
who are in favor of establishing the Union and free in-,
stir talons one permanent and enduring basis, in as
vudatice with the Reconstruction measures of our
tic Congr&s, are respectfully requested to assem
ble in their respective election diatricts throughout the
County, on
Saturday. Angsmi 24, 1567. .. -
- between the hours of 3 and 7 o'clock in the afternoon,
and elect 2 delegates from each district. to 'repreaent
them in the County Convention to be beld in the Coint
Bona% in the Bo.ough of Pottsville, on
Monday. August 26, 1867,
at 10 o'cloe , in the forenoon, for the pnrpose of nom
inating a Ticket to be presented to the voters of
Schuylkill County at the ensuing -election.
The following officers are to he nominated:
ONE JUDGE
.OF THE COURTS, to be elected in
conjunction with the 'Counties of LebainOn and Dau
phin.
ovE PERSON FOR SENATOR.
THREE MEMBERS OF THE GENERAL ASSEM
BLY."
ONE PER: I ION FOR ASSOCIATE JUDGE: •
• ONE PERSON FOR TORY COMMISSIONER.
ONE PERSON FOR SHERIFF. -
ONE PERSON FOR COUNTY - TREASURER.
. ONE PERSON FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER,
ONE PERSON FOR DIRECTOR OF THE POOR,
ONE PERSON FOR AUDITOR. . .
The election of these delegates will be held at' the
places and by the persons following, - resPectively-a
Auburn-House of Samuel Helm-Henry
Samuel K. Moyer.
Ashland-East Ward-House of William Goyne-
Wesley Manley, A K. Schwartz. Middle Ward,-
House of Elias Kehler-John Whitman, Valentine
Shollenberser. West • Ward-House of Enoch W.
.Morgan -Henry Learn, Robert A. Heaton. •
Barrv--House of C, W. Biliman-George Dengler,
Daniel F. Greene.
Butler South -House of .John Whitman-Paul Paul,
Esq.. J. T. Lewis Esq. • -
Butler North-Rouse of John Griffiths, Girardsville
-Philip Mangold, Capt. John Cahoon.
Blythe-House of Daniel G. Barnett-Charles Tan
ner. 4:9. Woolley. - •
Branch-House of Abm. T. .Trontman-Jacob F..
Heim, Esq., Capt. Henry J. Alspach.
• Bninsmck East-House of George - Drelbelbies-Pani
Bock, - William. Long.
Brunswick West-Eloise of Michael Moser-Joehua
'Helsel, Morgan Shoener. .
Cass North-Elense'of Mrs. P. Eagen-Fella Heir
man, William McDonald. •
Cass SonthHouse of Mrs. Walker; Morgan
Brace, Thomas Patton.
Cressooa-House of George Petit -Franklin Straneb.
Charles W. Dengler, Eeq. '
- .
Eldred-House of J. Gcise -Irwin , Boyer, . John D.
Ifepler. • '
.Foster-House of Hiram Moyer-John Henry, John
Francis.
Fralley-Honse of •David -Lonnson-Lewis
Fig ~ B. S. Reedy.
'leg insi- House. of Henry Troutman-Elia§ "Arts,
Moses Dunkelberger. • •
Hubley-Horse of John . A. Klinger-,JoeephStranb;
Gabriel Seltzer. • ' .
landingville-House of Israel. Koller.'-Reuben Hoy,
William D. Kline..
Mstiumy City, Rut Ward-House of Emanual Roy
er-John R. Porter, - Reese A.-Jones. West Ward:-.
Mansion House-Edward S. Sillyman, Philip Conrad.
Mabanoy Township-House of .D M. Boyer . , Shenan
doah City-Capt. La Mar S: Hay, David J Evans.
East Ward-Ifouse of Morgan Swartz:-
Richard K. Levan. Capt; Charles N. - Brumm. • West
• Ward-Honse of Evau Evans-Lemuel D. Jones, Ja
cob 8. Lawrence.
• Mount Carbon House of 3 . larks -Matted-Walter
S. Shaeffer, Joseph Erb.
• Manheim North-House of Effiabetit
Blttle, .Azariah Jones. - •
Manheim East-House of- F. Donnahou-Edward
Hamilton. Andrew M. Gray. -• • '
Manbeim. South-Flonse of Andre* Reber-Abra
ham A. Bartolette, Esq., Joseph-Paxson. .
Midileport-House of Henry Krelee-:Philip Hap-
Pert, Andrew Shreadley. • -
New Castle = House of Ephralui Phillipe-Dr. Rob
ert Phillips, Harvey Young.
• Norwegian-Bulls Head Hotel-Urlahliarnes, Nich
olas Gross.
Norwegian. East -House of George Millward-George
Wilde, Joshua Crawshaw. _
Oraigeburgs-House of Mrs. Mary Shoerier-George
A Fey, William Leffler.
Palo Alto-Palo Alto florets-W. 8. Chillson, Esq.,
T. F. Wright.
'Port Carbon-llonSe of Michael K. Weand-Major
Rosa Bull. Leonard Mertz.. •
Port Clinton-Homo. of Edward Boyer,-John S.
Rick, Esq., Sergeant 0. C. Hatch.
PinegTove Borough-House of Samuel P. Filbert- 1
Henry Wemtz, Esq.. Major Peter A. Filbert.
Pinegrove - Township-House of John Dobbs-Peter
Stein, John F. Werntz, Esq
Pottsville, South Ward-Moose of Jesse DrumhellSr
• -James R. Shearer, Henry C. 'Russel. South East
Ward-American House-Henry Gresaang, F. B. Wal
lace. Middle Ward-Middle Ward Hotel-John Ebert,
Capt. - Charles W. Schnerr. North West Ward-House
.of William Sterner-J, -Franklin Ilarrls, Daniel -G;
Matthews. North East Ward-House of .Thomes
.. John K. Fernsler, Dr. E. Holt..
For:ex.-House of J. Updegrove-Alex. 'Thompson.
Peter Swaim.
Rush-House of William Nei - fert-Jaeob Faust,
- Abraham L. Bonehoer.
Rahn-School 'rouse - John Moser. Rosser Andrews.
Reilly--House of Martin Zerbe-Abraham B. EvatiS,
Robert Weir. ' • •
Schuylkill-House of Benjamin Rowbottom-Ricil
aid C. Russet, George Singley: .
- Schuylkill Sonth-Honse of John Hartman, Lewis
town-Jeremiah F. Werner. Esq , John Shoener.
.Schuylkill. Haven, - North Ward-House of Adam
Snyder-William H Seyfert, George Burton, East
Ward-House of Israel Wat,rner-jolan Hickson, Henry
Hoffman. South Ward-House of hint. Mary Soong
-Capt. James E.'llelms, D. J. Timmer. ' • West Ward
-House of Mary Koons-Albert Leiby, Thomas
- Whalen.
• • St. Mir South Ward-Horse •of Jame Wood-
James Blacker. John Seitzinger, Esq. Middle Ward-
House of F. W. Richardson-Louis li. Koch, 'Joseph
Denning. - North Ward -House of Charles Johnson-
William Outings, Roland Whitfield.
Shenandoah.City-House of. D. M. Hoye-Thomas
Cassidy. David J. 'Evans. •
Tamaqua, East Ward-House of Peter. Marks-
Capt. A. H. Glassmire, Lieut. H. H. Snyder. North
Ward-House of Michael Beard-William Prlser, D.
C. Reinhart. South Ward-House of D. H. Wilcox-
Cant. J. M. Hughes, James Scott. ,
Tremont Boroush-Flouse - of James 11111-Daniecß.
• Althouse, Gabriel Drake. .
Tremont Township-School House, Lower Harish .
Creek-James Fuller, Daniel Harvey. -
• Union- Horuse of John FensterMacher--Joehna
Jacob Breish.
• . Upper Idatiantongo-llonse of Wm. G. Herb-Isaac
Knorr. Esq . Henry Hoffa. . .
Washington--House of Isaac Batdorff-Franklin W.
'Reber, John Conard.
Wayne-House of Charles Hummel--John W. Heff
ner, Faq Jacoh Wommer.
West Penn-House of Noah Kistler-Jacob Manta,
A.. Knapp.
Yorkville-House of John Fletcher-Irwin -
la
gher. George Yerger.
• We ecrnestlyreqnest every . Union voter to attend
these primary meetings. so that a - good and active list
of delegates may be selected, who will tee that .11 . 0010
and =LIABLE men are selected es candidates for price.
. By order of .the Union County Committee. .
T. Gesaurramr, Chairman. -
.
F. B. WALLACE, Secretary. •
August 10, 15-11.
.. . •
Ma. FUNK, editor of the Miltoniao, died
this week.
Ex-GOVERNOR PORTER died in Harrisburg
on Tuesday, aged 76 years.
GREENHOOD NECBAIIER, coal merchants
or San Francisco, have failed,for $280,0003
THE new fifteen-cent fractiOnal currency
will not be issued - until after the meeting of
Congress.
THE fire-brick manufactory of Geo. J.
Eckert, in Reading, was destroyed by fire on
Tuesday night. Loss, $12,000. Partially
covered,by insurance.
kr the recent election in Kentucky one of
the candidates was . charged with having been
in the T:nion army during the war. As the
charge was damaging his prospects be pub
lished a card in which he positively denied
having had anything to do with the Union
army. ..That is the State in which there was
a great Democratic victory the other day.
TROBE in favor of making Greenbacks and
other National Bank Notes as worthless as
the Continental money of the olden times,
should vote for Judge Sharswood. He says
that gold and silver is the only legal curren
cy, and , that all paper money--even that is
sued under authority of the National Govern
ment, is Asa. ,
liken to our regret we are compelled to
omit'the publication this week of the last let
ter received from our entertaining European
correspondent, "C, H. H." It did not come
to hand until Thursday afternoon last, too
I ate to he placed in type for to-day's Joureall•
Our correspondent writes from Berlin undei
date of July 28. The letter will appear in
otir next, and we trust all his, forthconalng
letters . regularly thereafter.
Tits tax-payers Of the County are wailing
to hear from the Directors of the Poor in re
ference to the $lO,OOO which they had drawn
from the bounty Tremry up to the, let of
May, and_ for which they have not yet ac
counted. Do the Directors have the remotest
idea of ever enlightening' the people on this
matter? Or, do they expect the people to
submit quietly to what wears the appearance
of a direct robbery of the Treasury ? Come,
Messrs. Directors, explain: The tax-payers
have been very patient - Reward them by
(Mpg t 14664 6 ihtlt Mil NNW.
TEE triTIONPACILTO
Open 423 Mlles.
A few weeks since We noticed the opening of the
Union Pacific Railroad . to. Juletdmrgi 377 miles
west of Omaha, ind we now have to report its
completion to Orow Creek, a point4B miles further
west, making a total of 425 miles. Fifty miles of
track in
.'addition are graded ready for the iron
and there is no doubt - of the completion of the
_roadio the base of the Rocky Idlinntains early in
the Fall. The (Tonigany_are confident that the
whole line to the Pacific will be open for business
in 1370. The Indiathi have annoyed the surveying
parties and. tie•cutters; who are many hundred
Miles in &diaries of the .work; but they have a
whillesomelear of the pelinlation that a railroad
carries with it, and all trains run without inter- .
The business of the Company has been most
flattering. The earnings for the quarter ending
-August let, were about $700,000 ; but as the re
port for the last week inJuly has not been receiv
ed, the exact fraction cannot be: given. .These ,
earnings seamed from operating an average of
not more than 350 miles of road, and after deduct-
tog operating expenses, the,balance is far in ex
cess of the interest obligadons of the Company
on the, amount of brads they can issue on that
distance. - It 'should be remembered that this re.
Kilt is from a WAY business shoe; through s new
country; and is not to be compared with the vast
xratoron brininess 'that must follow - the opening
of the whole line to the radii°. The success of
the enterprise seems to be tieroughly assured,
and we can Bee no reason why the Firstlitortgage
Bonds are not entitled to rank among the best se.
The daily sales ire now so large, that
the Company alreadyontertain the idea ad
vancing the prices. • •
INFAIIOUS AssAIILT ETON COLES' JUSTICE
CHASE. —Tbe Copperhead press cf Peimsyl
sania is .disgusting. decent people by The
reckless, lying statements itis promulgating
in this campaign- Recently those.papers
published a forged paragraph coarsely and
offensively- abusing this State; alleged to have
been taken from the Salem (Mass.) Jounial.
The.ediltor of the . Salem Gazette, thus .nalls
the clumsy falsehood
'''rhat whole Mint Is a Bei There is no each paper
as the SalesnJonmsi here in the drat place, and, in the
second place, no anch article ha. been published here
by any. Paper."
This forcible denial settles that campaign
document of the Copperheads. ,
Now, for want , of sound arguments and
good principles, every eight by: ten Copper:
head sheet in the_State is attackingin a das—
tardly and unjustil4ble manner - the - character
and reputation-of Chief Justice Chase. The
Copperhead papers assert that Xr. Chase
"laid aside seven hundred tkousand dollars
as. Secretary of the Treasury in four years.",
This is in plain terms an ,unmitigated lie.—
Mr. Chase came out of thatposition poorer
than when he entered IL,: te is not to-day
worth one-seventh Of the amount which he,
is slanderously reported miming "laid aside'
in four years." Long before he became con
nected with the Treasury Depaxtment he was
interested to some extent 'in one or two of
the telegraph lines of the country, and by
this and his law practice he Was able to ac'
cumulate about seventy-five thousand to one ,
hundred thousandilollars, and this is to-day
about the'extent of -his wealth. 1
And yet this faithful officer and one of the
purest and most upright men of the nation,,
is branded in the public press as having dis-,
honestly acquired the sum of sever' hundred.
thousand dollars during his term of office.—,
The National Intelligence% the special orgart
of President Johnson, characterizes this ss
sault upon Mr. ..Chase's character as contemp
tible and disgraceful, and the man 'who would
utter or publish such calumnious charges
should be hooted from all respectible society
and branded with the contempt of all honest
Of all the public men of our country there
are none whose honor and private character
and integrity are more pure and unimpeacha- ,
file than those of Chief:Justice Chase*. The
Copperhead party of
,this State must be in
desperate condition when it is compelled to .
resort to falsehood and. falsifications, and
defainations and libels on private character,
in order to compass...the election of Jadge
Sharswood.
THURSDAY'S New York Tribune in an
•
article headid "Gen. Grant and Congress,'
objects to the attempt of the Times of the
same eity„to Making Gen: Grint a Radical,
"when there is no written er spoken Word
that we [the Tribune,] have ever seen or
heard to justify the assertion, and while all
his acts, and the _acts of his loudest friends,
lead to a contrary - inference." 'ln concluding
its article, the,' Tribune in speaking of the
Johnson-Copper.rebel Conservatives, who are
trying to make political capital with the daz-
zling and illustrious name of Grant says :
We bow before that name so fares it represents.val
or and -patriotism, skill in the field, moderaticm in
council, and genius triumphant in war. .'.A year or two
since we bowed to the name of Andrew Johnson as
the representative of self denying loyaliry, War against
treason, and clamorous devotion to Radicalism. But
far above these names, as high as the stars, and to ns
guiding stars, we see-certain principles. whose life
sternal, and whose sitcom is more important to this
people than.that of niece men. We follow them, and
whoever carries our banner mart lead the way. All
considerations of availability, of personal reward, of
pleasing this interest or that, are temptationsto desert,
and mean mischief. We'sustain no man whose record
is not as clear as the sun. We follow no leader who
does not tell us which way he intends to travel Above
all things, we have as a party been too terribly juggled
to run the risk again.' . _ -
No stronger proof of the necessity of a Pro
tective Tariff, to which the Copperheads as
a party, are in deadly opposition, is needed,
than the inllowing table of the quantity and
value of the Importations of iron and steel to
this couhtty during the first five months of
the present year, which we extract from the
Iron Age
Quantity. . :Value.
-
- ..-
rigiron, tom " -.--
$316,134
Bar " . '23.1112
. 1,163,403
Boiler iron, lbs. • 503,311 •-. 21,20
Band, hoop and scroll !son, 1b5..16,120,746 - -835,319
Railroad iron, tons ,p ... ? 62,671 1,619,890
Sheet Iron, lbs 13,071,669 . -365,277-
Anchors, cables and chains, lbs. 6,606.890. 265.439 .
Manufactures not specified , ... 1,612,67 c
Steel, - and manufactures. of. , ...: - 4,216,805
Every dollar of these produCts should have
been produced In this country. If' the Cop
perhead party. should be placed in power,
the country Would lose whet protection it has,
inadequate . as it is, and the importations of
foreign iron and steel would be "
even heavier
than they now are.
No'one Wail surprised at the announcement
that the jury In the Surratt case had disagreed,
and that it had been discharged. Seven of
the twelve were Southern men and rebel syrn
pathizers. The Democratic party hoped for
his acquittal, because that result in its opin
ion, would have been a condemnation of the
Military Commission,- that tried Mrs. Ser.
ratt and the other conspirators who were exe
cuted. Surratt - will be tried again, and the
next panel will it is believed, be loyal. The
evidence of the late trial has satisfied the
country of his guilt, and that he must be
punished. His counsel, thebully and black
guard Bradley, has very properly' had his
name stricken from the list of attorneys by
Judge - Fisher, for bad conduct toward the
Bench during the trial. For this, Itradley
challenged the Judge, for which he is liable
to five years' imprisonment, according to the
laws of the. District of Columbia. We trust
that he will get them to teach him a lesson
in decency. - ,
Ir the accusations that the Reading Reiltoad
Comp
t iny refuse to act
,fairly in the matter' of
trans rtation are true, we fail to see how it is
that ese meetings are to obviate the matter. It
is much easier to effect compromise rwith such
a corporation than to attempt to force them to
terms.—Reading Daily. Dispatch.
It is only by public meetings_and agitation,
and by laying incontrovertible facts and fig
ures before the community, that interest can
be awakened and evils be abated. It Is the
proper plan. As for compromise with the
Reading Railroad Company,. the' experience
of this Region in that directioe, has - been
that of the North withthe former slaveoc
racy, we have invariably been the . loser.'
The simple questions are, shall $100,000,600
of investments here be allowed to go to ruin
under the oppressive policy of that Company,
orishall we organize to protect them? That
is the matter in anutehelL
PIE PHILADELPHIA ANDREADING RALLHOAD
COMPANY.—This - week we publish the address
of Mr. Hughes delivered in 'Union Hall =this
Borough, on. the 7th.- instant. The facts
which it contains .in reerence to the 'extor
tionate and, oppressive policy of the Reading
Railroad Company, should command qui at.
tendon of all who have property, colliery or
Other, in this Region. While other coal re
gions in our immediate vicinity are nourish
ing, our interests are under the heel:of a des
potic railroad monopoly. - The people should
not rest satisfied until they procure neW 'com
petitive outlets to Market. • ,
"A Strascaissa."—The compound interest
notes of the dates you mention, cut, be
held until December, when they all mature,
at which time they will be redeemei. Of
course the "interest ceases at the date of ma
ttrrity. We might mention Quit idr. F.
Whitney, the banker, of this - Borough; id
cashing these notes now, at a. small charge,
we believe at from twentrtive to dirty cents
- On the hunch , ed dollars, and that parties would
find it - quite as on& to their advantage and
to &op to dispose of thorn tohimous loom%
tbto ttr OdefaMint dgollitOsies.
TEE PitKBSTIVANIA STATE Tcatearasiscs
limos has issued a cireubtr urging the forni- -
ation of county - "Unions," as auilliarY.
the State organization. It is not , desired to ,
Weaken or supersede , any temperance organ
ization or moral agency of any form now ea
but to unite all "Bona of Temperance,-
Templars, GOod Templers, members of , open
Temperance Sixietles, churches, colleges and
!tcademies, in counsel and effort for the ad
vancement of the Temperancia cause." Ti
State is divided into three dishicts, of whieh
this County forms a part of the Eastepa.
WilliankNicholson, Esq., of Philadelphia; it;
the Secretary of the Pennsylianis State Tem- -
perance Union, whose oflicehiNci. 181 Sonth
Seventh Street, Philadelphia,
.to whom in
correspondence relating to the .
- general work
in the State should be addressed, and all'
quarterly and other reports from County tint
pna,`auziliaries and agents should , be made.
He will also respond to calls for contientions,.
Public meetings, tracts, Publications. &e.
The last Temperance State Convention
vaned a.resolution authorizing the raising by
apportionment among the several counties of
the State of ten thousand dollars for the pur
pose Or carrying on the work of spreading
,temperance, light and truth throughout the
State. Pot Schuylkill the quota is WO.—
'The State Union will furnish a form of Con
stitution foreounty Unions. *
WilaAce, head fugelman of Copperhead
ism, sneers at, Judge Williams because he
was-not barn in Pennsylvania. This is a-sly
hit , at Irish and. Germans who vote the
Democratic ticket. Certainly if Wallace op
poses a man.solely. because he was not.born
in this State, be must hate all who were not
born in the country. From this position op
posing a man on account 'of the accident' of
birth, the . Democracy will progress until they
proicribti a man on the score of, his religion.
LOCAL NOTICE/3.
Fazsan,-English and American clothe, all styles, and
of the finest qttalities,sat D. A. Smith's, Dente street.
' Ckavzs, Neck-ties and Itesei.to suit every taste, sad
at reduced prices, at D. A. &pith%, Centre street,
Sic A WOMAN in another telmnrypicktng pyre for
Speer% Wine:. It la an admirable article, used in the
twaTitilla and by the gist-.dams &minim in Paris,
Lan
don and New . York, in preference to Old Port:Wine:7
It is worth a Wakes it glyee great aatiefactiort..
Fume PAIIDID teas . Derma, a beautiliil article, a
D. A. Smith's, Centre street.::' .
THE COAL TRADE.
Pottsyille. August:l7,lB6i.
- The quantity sent by railroad this week is
61,743 01:—by canal 23,748 05--for the week
75,491 06 tons against 122,6.52 tons for the
corresponding week last year. - '
The trade remains withoutimprovement. In
addition to the collieries that have been com
pelled to stop:in consequence of the unrema
neratiVe prices now paid for coal, the rains this
Week have '"drowned out" a number, and it is
likely that the
,"shipments of the`coming week
' will be light. One thing is certain, Coal has
reached theloWest point in price which it can.
reach this season. Those who delay laying
in. Coal in expectation of getting It at lower
figures, "reckon with Out their host," for with
- many collieries closed the prodnction will be
lessened and prices must advance* as cold
weather approaches. We therefore; advise
all to lay in their coal now; who want to :do
it cheaply.
The trade sums up this week as follows,
compared with last year : - -
• 1866. 1967. " • ' • -
aro. .49 -
WITH. TOTAL; WILL Tom- '
P&R RR 88,278 2,412,651 61.743 1 2,042,931 d 390,42 2.
f3chayl Can 84 , 374. 814,251 23,748 690,168 d 224,093
L Val RR. 47,211 1,169.346 -46,060 1,242,655 13,309
U6l'll' Cal] 32,869 .529,333 '23,638 492,164 d 57.928
Saint 13th. 23,465 Eiss,9lo. 27,750 • 779,140 141,280
• .N. 1.6 9,669 253,75!; '9,775 248,166 d 5,690
By R Road 17,778 162,552 19,825 478,128 115,576.
By Canal.. 824 . 13,068 832 11,796 d 1,272_
Del &Rod 11,113 141;942 85,440 - .731,498 9.564'
Wy'ng Stb - 218,801 . 127;647 d 91;164
o Nth
Bhamoldn.. 12,111 :837,631 '1.4,984 '290;911 3 46,920
Trevorton.. • 1,436 • 33,415 .99 ••• 28,117 d 5,298
'l3bortlit.... '3,386 49.495 9,183 40,993 d' 1.592-
L..V. 1,885 36,262 1,954 37,917 1,6E5
2.297 26,672 4,058 '69,114 82,442
Broad . Top. -5,247 164,384 -142,277 d 22,107
. . 311,819 7,468,036 259,523 7;248,790
259,523 7,248,796, ••. •
• 52,296 269,240 • . -
TEtE
,Philadelphia "fugelman" of the Phil
adelphia and Reading Railroad Company,
having received his "cue" is now engaged in
assaulting this Coal Region and, defending
the ruinous policy of that corporation. When
the' organ which he controls, can give good
reasons why theßeadikßailroad should ab•
aorbialifthe lateral ioads in this: Region
why. it should be permitted to make such ex
tortionate nharges for transportation that iron
works are driven frt . = along its main line to
the Lehigh 'Valley ; why it , should charge the
manufacturers . and people of Philadelphia
from twenty-five to fifty , cents a ton more
than the manufacturers and people of New
York-are compelled to pay, thus discrimina
ting against the former city, and taxing its
people a million of dollars, perannum more
than they should pay. for fuel, and finally,
why the citizens - of Schuylkill County should
not,raise their voices against an oppressive
monopoly, and endeavor to obtain relief,' then
his opinions may have Weight, not before.
The sentiments of it subsidized press can
have no influence with a people laboiing un
der Manifest evils which depress thew bud
neas and affect the value of their property
to the amount of millions of dollars.
' Coonatretaavxo,)
• • august 10% 186 T
EDITOI36 Morns'
.
Jotrarrit r--I observe by a late num•
of
of the Uoad and g Register
Of Philadelphi nited a, that the edito r r
of that M paper Is again
very much exercised in. spirit over the recent move
ments of certain citizens in this ()aunty with reference
to new outlets for the productions of its coal mines,
and relief from the . extortions and oppressiorna of the
managers of the Philadelphia and Rading Railroad Co.
It appears that any effort on the part of our people
to rid themselves of the "monster monopoly," excites
the bitter hostility of this man in away mod unaccount
- able for an editor of epaper having such a high sound
ing title. The 'most charttsble construction to place
upon his acts is to suppose him the hired advocate of
the present management of that road. and as such his
strictures amount to nothing with capitalists abroad, or
the coal men of this Region:
The. editorials referredto show that he is wanting in
all the essentials of a high. toned writer upon railroad
and - mining sehjects, by stooping to utterances as un
fair as they are untruthful. Ile talks flippantly of mat!
tern about which he is totally ignorant, and thrusts his
nons , nsical advice upon the people as complacently'as
though he imagined the perfection of wisdom embodied
in himself:
The people here remember the numerous frothy arti
cles he wrote to prove the otter worthlessness of the
fichuylkill Haven and Lehigh River Railroad. If they
were designed to,aid in crushing this Region, by the
absorption of the Mule Hill Railroad and Its extensions
by the Reading Company; he succeeded most admira
bly; but if sincere In his conclusions, he alone enter
tained them, for so- well convinced were the owners
and managers of the Reading ,Railroad of its impor
-trines., that they hastened to abandon their favorite
scheme of reducing the value of the stock of the Mine.
Hill Railroad so as to enable them to buy up enough to
control it. and leased it and the , Schuylkill - Haven and
Lehigh River Railroad in order to preyent the con
straction of the latter, and the diversion of the tmdeby
it to New York. The route has lost nothing in valise
aims . that time ; •on the .contrary, its necessity and
value has become more apparent, and the people here
are determined to have it constructed despite the
"windy" mutterings of the Reading Company and their
tdrelmg.
. ,
$10,495,119
Bates ot - . Velli and -Trattspo station
- Ptirs.snxxeme. Arm RZADING Rensoin.
From Pottsville to Philadelphia $2 IT
do do Port Richmond 9Or
do . do New York, drawback off 9SO
• . - SOLIGYIXELL NAVIGATION.
From PoturrMe to Philadelphia - • 908
do do New York, drawback off 988 .
New
Aymun.
Prom Manch Chunk to rhiWelphia, Canal, inclu- -
•
ding unloading 1 SS_
to Philadelphia, vta North Penna. R. R.... 900
to Blirabethport via N. J. Central B. R...: 2 OS
to Port ~ ...... . 910
to New York. ' 2 68
to New York via Del. Div. and Barites
nal including unloading • • 2 6T
do 'to New York via Morrie Canal ' •2 S 9
do to Hoboken via. Monti and Bases' R. R... 2 'lO
•do to New York. .9 90
From Blizabethport to Buffalo, via New York Ca
=l, a distance of about' 450 • miler— .
• freight, $2 62—t011, TS cents. 8 40
- The shipping expenses at Blizabethport and Port
Johnson vary from 25 to SO cents. . •
ID.EDERIGK'S
COAL HOISTBG MUM,
INitented - APril 12,186%
.. •
It le now dee yeas due the town= of oar Goal
HoletlataaNdas, and never before, wfth say maeldne,
tune We begn Drated with such. Waring earesee.•
there being TOO of than in dem It Li /shop* durable,
Awed owl or , operation, - sad -hew the Urge number
sold &n the perfect setiefaction_ arra. , We make
them with Wheeled 6X, 6 rad El feet diameter. • De
' seriptire ettralantseat ft on aMat:
Masi nenietatatiN end Meath! Worlabeay, N.Y.
C(10A1I , LANDItem bile suacttwa (without
resemeatillY. September Irthillerf, at
.111 o'clock. noom at the BlerebewitV Ermluweller
I a " Mrs 1 11 4 11 4 Iliiiiilii !Wei 'i t
i re 1131 a "
lai%rt -. : it o B
tar " MN
. .
FEEMB
THE MI NEM - 8' eT 0 -13:--11314—A:,-E,''''.A:1;14:17....§.-T1-1-37-;
.
A lIITSIRAUJITIC COAL &AIMS FOS
11. 111AL11..-Mtrseightesrdhe of the lit. Labe
Estate lir dehoillcDl Dismty,' three tidies- door Potts-,
vide; four Collieries on the isatt arid two"others partly
supplied hien it, : Whole area Dearly 100 arses.
pdpn of
_ssgit on application. • " - • "
WARRIR PUthydne:
. . . • . . .
A PARTNER with canitil minted In the Coas..-
melon Coal. Bt aroma In 31f3W . York by a part)
having control of a large shipment of Ant class coal:
'Auldress, COAL, ?clonal .oMos. !Inlyilo-29.3t
• 1 1 relgtitafrein Blizadeethpert.• .
Nei, York. • p - -00 Newtimpart
Pall River— 140 err 14e4,04.,.....
Newport.
Bston. ... i ce
Norwlek. " 1.55 ew
Jtavidesigt.. - • 1 10
Norma. .lo o kell3e4b3rll..
' 115
1 75
.. ... 175
901L/10L
Poettand..
eale
Alban;..
•
Mirelights .11rono Pt. Stiellsasonwl. rphiliurs.
Breton • .. 900 Roxbury • At 25
Charlestown' • ' 200 firdliamslxirg
," -..... - 1 50
•lii
Gloucester ' •• 2 Medford. ..... . ....... 2 er
Hudson " . 136 I
Newpwt...:: . . .... .. 1 85
New York. "1:80 ' Pawtarket • • 2 00.
New London 1 'lli Quincy potut 9 90,
Pornureedb• 215 1 Salestnirg • • '9 90
Providence. • 1 Ta 1 litiomestown • • 2 50:
122 vessels and 59 boils .arched for week. . • • -
Plitladeliddi
New York:...,
Wrelglatkfrins . Greiirgesiowii Dili Alexandria
To. Philik&lptda: - • 41 264,
wew Tex*, - 2 1002 25".
THE COAL MARKETS.
PBIOTS or CIOAf. BY TILE •CARGO.
13ebtizikIll Bed r ai l
. PrePezeds
" White Ash Lump .
o. Bt. Boat and Broken..
,„ Egg
" Cheshint;
1 7 , 15 t 14 - E S nin t. gg lt .. s . ::St - Bo a t
,is is Stove •
Lehigh
kt. lent s and Broken....
" 'Stove
4, Chestnut,'" *****
grollaTc44 SrzOiei beam
Rill & Harris' *
St. Bo Broken
I' Stove
gt Obestaut ..... .
The following prioes are for shipments east a
Btonington, Conn., by Chas. J. and J. H
Eastwick, "
Burnside,
,
'Broken •
.•• 4 •75Q
Egg., . . ... .. 4
4.'750
Stove • ' • 7SQ
Nut B'soo
" Pea -• • ' 2 750
Lorberry Coal,.' . .. ...... 4 250 4. 44
•Yranklini (Lykene. ... 525 .
p - bll coals desired to be reported as eNrial, will be
pot under this head provided the qaotafthe, are fur
nished by the parties interested. : -
.
.., - •AT NEW YORK. • • z 1
±— •. • • imeo . . _ Aug. 15..186T.
80t111FTWI Bed Ash•by Boat - Load. ,S 6 500 600
. li , . Chestnut, - " -- ". ... 4 000 ' •
• " . '.• White Ash Linxip ' i,..".... 5.250 . 5 50 .
U . Stew. Boat and. Broken... 5 250
" ' Ekg - .• • • - •'5 000 5 50,
" . Stove ' • 5 . 00 g 5
. 50
.:. " • Chestnut , - .. ' - 4 00Z5 425
:Lehigh White Ash Ltunp • • • 5 050. •
" Steam Bgatitt4 Bnaken. :. :. 5 25011-
as
. Egg
: : . . 5 2511:5 50
" - Stove ' ' ' -'. - 5'2.50. 550
' I". • P4estnutti ' ...':.... 4 506 4'75
. • ' Mobligla'Coal at Ellsairellspiors. _ ,
Lunip, ' . • -by Cargo • • • 5 - 500
St.Boat'and Broken " '.."
Stove, 5 25e
- -- . • -"• . " . 5 250 550
Chestnut •• ' . •"''" . . : .. ... 4 750,5 ' •
• Etna ninon Coal iti Elissibethport.
Lump, '• • Auction prices $4. S6O
Steamer, .•, ". -4 s 0
Grate, . " . • ' 4
Stove, - - ' " ' ' ' - 4 . 49E5
'Chestnut, . • ".. - 8 990
•At private Bale 25 to 40 cents a ton. adfance, '.
Freight to New York 50 cents per ton. •.. •
Prima. Coarpaarho Coil at Newburgh.
Lump, - Auction price 5...... . -.. . .
St. Boat and Broken, ' ' . • $4 804 .
. Stove, ' . • . "• • • ... .... . 4 TT@
Chestnut, - " —. ...8 854 •
•st private wile 25 to 40 cents a ton advance. -
.. .
Freight to New York TO cents per ton. . , .
Del. iludiosii Co.la Coal .at.Donadont
• teircular prites for August and September, 1867.1
Lump - •- • . • •--$5lO - -
Steamboat -
Grate - • - • • 5 40 - .'
.11gg , . ' -660 .'
• Stove - • ' • • - 695
Chestnut • - - 470
From Roandout to New York 'lO cents a ton freight
JUNE 1,186 T
GUTS.
COAL
Friegl!tirfrem Bia!OixHire,
AT PHILADELPHIA.
TOIL EASTERN
• . A l
' • • T.
BALTIIIIORE. • •
• • Ank. 16,-1887.
Toiride from yard or wharves: • ••
W 000 625
Lykens Val. S. Aaeb. • '.B 2517 t 6 50.
Shamokin, white or B. Ash 5 . 58 Q 6 09.
Delivered to consumers • 7 006-7. 50
Georgeis' creek and. Cumberland COM '
fo.b. at Locust Point for . shipping. At 4.86@:6.10
Georgetown, D.. 0 • 1.2'0 4 60
Pinegrove Coal Trade for-1861.
• Amount traneportid during the last month :
swarth. • -. - TOTAL.
Lorberry ' Creek •'. 115.728 11 , 49,027 06
Good Spring . • •• 4,081 18.084.'19
.Union Canal Railroad • 19,810.08 • 08.091-16
. .
Schsrelkill Co, lisilrOwils.. foi '1867.
The following la the quantity of coal transported over
the following for the week ending on Than
dsy - want. '. Tor4r...
hew TSB 8 8.11. R. R... . . .... . 26,060_-0B 925.971 . 08
Schuylkill .Valley • - 3,65613 154, 769 11 .
Ml.. Carbon ' ' 1,082 IT • 23,334 00
Mill Creek • - '6,946 04 .222.927 08
fdahanoy .8 Broad Mt 29,439 08 - 828,410 12
Little Schuylkill....-
,--•- ' -
' ' '- • . BLACK BAND IRON ORB. . •
Sent over the Mlle . Creek Rail Road For the week
endhig on Saturday last, • .
08 08
Previously ' • 8;14310
---
Total • • . 3.201 18
Lehigh ac Illeibanoy Coal Trade for 1867.
. Week ending with last Saturday.
- • Names or Smersas.
Trenton Coal Company. ... . .
Mount Etna '
oyy C o
Colli
Ellendcm Coa Company
Rathbun..Stearne & Co
IL S. Stillman • •
McNeal cacti & Iron Company..
'Knickerbocker Coal Company...
Thomas Coal Company
Williams & Herring
Shamokin Valley Coal Company
New Boston...
Other Shippers. : ... ;.. . ;.•
cOnverppnatiii ;Wei" ii;A: ye
Inereem '
Caul Trade by Rail
St. Clair
Port Carbon
•
Pottsville •
SehttylkM Haven.:
Auburn
Port Clinton
' Total for week..
Previously tide year..
Total. -
To . same time lad Year
Increase -
Deanluse •
Lehigh Coal Trade for 1887.
For week ending . on Saturday last: • ,
-RAILROAD: - CANAL.
OPERATOR&
WICK. TOTAL. TOSAL.
Hazleton • 4,890 78,702 2,665 • 38,1
Bast Sugar L0af.. . .. 4,988 77, 1 9 2
Mt. Pleasant, 828 4,292 _ 2,
add° „ 3,172 . 73,616 1,223 27,
-Raleigh 1, 491 85 4 3 4 9 749 • 9 .
Con Bro & ' • 5,
libberaele Opal Co.; 9,001 40,477 1,013
Stout. 1.146 .19,248 481
Council Ridge 1,631 45,991 755
Burk M
ountain..... 880 80,5g 6 -
"New York & Lehigh 9,829 64,190 -6,
Honey Brook Coal 0 9,859 90,607 1,461 18,:
German Pa. Coal Co - 506 ' 94,090 • 203 5,1
Spring Mt. Coal Co. 2,635 87,497 - 100 1,1
Coleraine., 1,844 ..56,590 816 5,1
Beaver Mea d ow .... 25 • 7 . 021
Jo_ Connery _ . 1,585 •
al b‘ Zia eCo • - •
McNeal., 2.,550 61 4 63'f 97 -3,
'Hnlekerbiaer c 1,123 88,824 . 1,
Coal Ban Coal Co. -
Balkh= Caldwell 150 . 666 94,9 88 ' S S B
Glendon Coal 157 13,031
98 ' 10,539
Wo r t:as' 891 • 81•70 0 •
H. idayertt.. • . . _
Stillman. . 2, 0 7 9 66,901
BaltimoreO O al Co.. sso 28,211 - 12,.
Franklin. ,2133 8,783 93 6,1
Anilernia • . 150/ z 6,018 : 4,:
Letdah & 11.946 • - 9,1
Loarogoars....... • 289 _ 9,438 189 •51
Wrlkeebarro.: ' 487 44.238 1, - 725 400
Warrior Bon 42'3
Parrish* Thomas:. 824 .26,545 •
288 8,1
Leh. Coal a Nay Op - 8,963 1114
Taker Steer a 00. ' • • 1,1
:Mt. Nina
North X
Wallet Bloc . i 05:;
. . .
N.,Tersey -Coal- Co_ .. 839 "10,839 . 283 8,1
John Lanbach aOa . • •
Venial Coal ' " 1,609 -
Union Coal 0 7,659 196
Wyombtg Coal 0o.: 149 • 16,721. 188 15,756
. • . 46,060 1,949,666 23,628 492,104
• • ' 23,628 498,106
Tong by FL a Canal 69,688 1,1[34,759 „ • •
Base time lad year. 81,298 1,698,670
lllaeaee --
36,080
Dawasaw • 11,608 - • •
NEW ADVERT'AENTS.
Te Tea . Drtalters.—The finest Black Tea to
' town.. • . .JNo. 0. BEcir,..
Cpalmier Apraekers , ..Just - the- dyr
r peptic& 1 . JllO,O.
V n egur .. Correa Mum, pita - . Belk and Tosaviieip,
S
jut remtved. • MO.' O.- BEM
GRUM Male Covers, that prevent the Pies from
In the puttee and vegetables. Mal l ose.
matlent rettb g all ties, both round an_a_Kusse, at •
Aug 1V..33. LEWIS O. 1710/MM•
VElrire Griddles for barhaealail almtnit lagrkerah .
v all mires, cm Mad. matt het. that- am be Mood
an the Arra. Alaotlaned tribune that via sot rut;
m . LSWIBU THOXPOON /a 00.11.
R
ammo, both round and etioare,of ell stem
TV that Win It say Mole ormose. We also have
the oldreahketedloog hiadlid hind that are preemie
by many persons, el- L. O. TitaIKEWON &COM.
200;000 BRICKS
FOR BALE '01134P.
ALL ac seamms, P.
0da...110k - of iivoq otiperkw :oath" D ) kmatiu t
s SOosts O.
two poondi of wttiett wlll wake so =dr
imp tooiranYloodeout , 'of -tbloo pounds of oir.
f/Idnit. Ifithei_posus•
= l i r
. .
STRAW3agitirtY -P-LAN'T.S
,
kg °lll/4 94 1 " a geat '
aItEIGN. O
Telmer a G ai , d
.
Ida. Metonlfla Ear Y. Agri= tsarist. Ihis:
ne w s prefific, Suazusla or Mamas 700.
- A Jew thousand IssPOtalor fading nest stains_
.1.0402 3 0 2 0 67 :
S lk; OU NT Y.
•skaineek4l34 , T , •
.
Rthibliion of 'the ectdeti
wal be held cm Um Mb. nth Ina -.2 6 ,g 1 days or Sep
caliber *A; st: Orwloobims:Po , BT. coder alba
s oc i e ty; . SOIL.#.?f4LT. R, Record. Setty.
2 00
1'25
1 50
165
1 00
900
1 45
1 00
1 50-
I.2llrrsliACltisnaiifig 4 raeigaiwied is
thif rogt - 001 , *., at PottOrdne. `state of pbuneyi ta .: .
Tontte la th day Of 2010 1 4 . tier.
obbp orthese letters , thetwarant intda cell
t ee “ e d Is= thedateof this. list, and
pilaw cent fOr
if not called far withtn,ons Month they will b e web
BMus Nichol etn rtB Oren Jams! '
cook Thixtuts amp • nate lie
en
&dm trXd 2 -Lieweito T • Rites Haven strp
E lgeze wee, telasAlltoyez o=mi , • Seldomridge Joan'
er nog= Anthony t3harpless Geo W
Gilbert John Ifeaser Lizzie • Saler Annie
Hades lir ' !kick may '
Hem el mgry z -Cslionelf Pat Williams Joseph
KetWertlevi;. 011 0 0 . ks Bernard Wrlght•Nanny_
, , AILLYMA.N. P. M.
400 15
.. 2 000 S SO'
BO® 466
pi *Semi Cora Sheller... Anew article Just out - 1
JrC will shell 46 bushels of:dry corn clean off the cob ,
per d ay, no t l e aving a kernel on: and by reveraing the
machine It cats **eh corn off the cob equally as feet
= it* es well.:: .Can be , attached to 'the back of. a
chair or anywhere intlekitchen. Just the thing' for
drying or putting up fresh corn. 'For sale cheap at
ang..1.6-83 , .... • 13W 23 p..THOSFSON & ccvEL
LOBlTD.spomm•-thi ateedaccrw'yrgtetweenl3,saaraTßd. A . • Ism s
6 jeare ehe lutd a chain around her
neck, with bran bell attached. A adtable
reward will be paid to any one returning
the came to the subscriber. ANTHONY - KT-Mx .
Anguit 17; 3113t'i Palo Alto.'
Cr
. .
ides.. Wine. Cidor,--See the' Family Cider
Mill.. • The price Is so low that every farmer can
affordone. and hive at all times Pore Nine and Sweet
Cider. Call and see them at • •• • , •
. Aug. - 17-43. . LEWIS C. THOMPSON & CO..S. •
it,' - 1867.
4 500 •
2 90@ 00
4'000,4 25
4 000 4 25
4 0042
4 00e
2'900 800
4 100 25
4100 4 25
4 . 000-4 10
4 000 4.20
2 90'd s 00
5250
5 250
5 250
5 , 250
4 00a •
5 000 •
New .Book of Ctinises; -
T y .
0 P R. A OIL 0 RIE S E -
Selected and arranged 1 from the works of Roaultd;
Auber, Bellird, Donizettl. Oonnal, V er dj, ri otc , n
Eiriontint, Wagner,Herold, Blebep. Halle, Benedict.'
and others • Forming a moat valuable' collection for
Societies, Conventions, Ch oir s . 81 r 4 ing Schools, Clnba
and Social Circles. •
_ • •• BY EDWIN BRUCE.
Three
•.. • Cop* mOled, Yost paid
01.1 1 78 R 'DIMON & CO. I . Pnbhshers, 217 Washlogbun
street,)kxston,:.OHAßLßS, H. • =SON • ;k
Broadway; New York. •1 - . - Aug. 1.7...67—1c
5051 . •
4.50®.
4 500
4 75@ •
's Mt .90
czatilitn oBAND-SOCIABLE:-•
-.80 Bf GIVEN BY mY
GOOD. INTENT • ASSOCIATION,
cpmplim ! Qtary to thOGIOd Intent Fire Coq,
"•. AT SPRING OARDiN. - :
ON :WEDNESDAY. 1411`4,16, 116. 21, 1867;
•:Itlrlodles_arorepeollly tutted to attend...Ai
• ADmuoggllON. 26 imitirro.
• Anil:war; , er • • 83-? i•
ORDINANCES of she Boronight of BT t
- Ast ardisitimee relatbt . to Stovepipes, Chimneys,
of St. C lair.
•Be It ord ain ed; hbc.,,, That all stovepipes or chimneys
passing throdgh any portion of buildings without being
properly secured from Are, . and any In outbuildings or
appurtenances not so secured are hereby declared thine
a nnisanee, and It shall be the duty of the Chief Bar
gees to notify all such versons to remove or secure the
same to a safe condition—that they pay a fine office
dollars ($5.00) for every neglect. Pes•ed May 81.106 T.
• H. B. SESSINGRR. Pont. Council. •
Attetd.—JAlM mar., Town Clerk,. • , •
An ordinance regulating tha depth of Privies
and Cess Pools.
- Be it ordained ; dte.,
That all cese pools and privies
shall be at least eight feetdeep, and well inclosed, any
such tem pools or privies on the surface of the ground
are hereby declared nuleancev. Any person violating
this ordinance shall papa flne of ten dollars. ($lO.OO
Famed May 31, 1567. •
*- ..11. B. RESSINGER. West Council.
Attest—JAMES CRAZE. Town Clerk.
• . .
An ordinance re'ating to Fire Amis. .
• Be it ordained, Vic., That any person or persons firing
'Or causing to be fired any kind of fire arms - within this
Borough. shall upon conviction thereof-forfeit and pay
a fine of four dollars. for theme Of the Borough. Ilium
ed Iday ni, ,67. '
11, B. SESSINGER.-Prest. Council:
Attest—JAMES CRAZE, .Town Clerk.:r• •
An
. ordinance to secure the Borough of St. Clair
from damage by Gunpowder.
Be Word/lined, That from and after the passing
of this ordinance no person - shall keep in any house,'
store, shop, cellar, or any, other place within this Bor
ough, a greater quantity of gunpowder than two kegs
at one time, under a penalty of not less than Event
more than fifty dollars,. for every keg ,of po.wder.,so
kept is any place aforesaid,. to be recovered with costa
of snit, fiadebte of the same amount are by law.recov•
emble, and...paid into -the treasury for the use of the
Borough. • Passed May 91:'67'..
. • IT. B.- SESSINGER . , Prest. Council.' •
Attest•-4AMES CRAZE, Town - Clerk.. • . •
. .
Au Ordinance prohibiting Offal to be thrown in
to Water Courses, or Streets, (te. , • • • .
Be it ordained, Ac., - That if any. person or tenons :
shall east throw ( r lay any carcase, ;carrion,- offal..or
filth of any kind whatsoever, into offty stream of water
Or water coarse, st'eet,' lens. gutter, alley or -hydrant,
• running in streets through the Borough, every•pauon
'eo offerdlingehitil forle,it a sum not less than flve, nor .
more than fifty dollirKto be'recnvered In the manner
tuadapplied to the uses aforesaid.- Passed May 31, !CT.
• Il B. SESSINOBR, Prent. Council.
Attest JAMES ciazg.,.Town -•-•
•
An oidinance prohibiting the throwing of Coal'
Ashes in the streets, and for other purposes. • • •
••Sac. 1. Be it ordained. That from and after the
passage of this ordinance, if. any • person or persons
shall cast, throw or - lay any coal dust.' coal ashes; or
-rubbish of any kind, into or in any street, lane, or al=
lay, of, thiaßorongh that has been graded, or the water •
- courses' therein-opened ; --every -person so: offending'
shall forfeit and pay for every such offence, a .sum not
less than one nor , morsttitan five dollars, to be recov
ered as debts of the same amount are by law recovers
ble. and paid into the,trgesury for the use of tho,Bor
.
Szo. 2. - Arid be it ,farther 'ordained ..tct. That from
and after the passage of this ordinance, if any-person
or person - shall place or' cause 'to be placed in any
street. lane; or alley, mentioned-in the first section of
this ordinance, any coal or any other • article of fuel,
and cause the same to remain more than twenty-four
hours, every such person shalt-forfeit and pay. the . sum
of hot-less than one nor more than five dolling. - But
in no, case shall any oral, wi od, or any other article of
• fuel be placed within two feet of the gutter,. tnatier.the.
above penalty, to be receveredin the same manner and :
'applied to the same purpose as*directed in the first c -
tont onhis 'ordinance. Passed May .11, 1867. , '
' • , H. B. SESSINGER. Brest. Council.. •
Atest,- . JAMES CRAZE, Town Clerk. .•
An oidinitoce To prohibit the sale of unwhole- -
some provisions within the 'Borough of St. Clatr, and to
secure cleanliness in the • shops :Ind . stands of persons
who sell provisions.. —• . •
. Be it ordained. &c., lhat if any huckster, trackman,:
' victualer shop keeper or Mbar person Shall sell or ex
pose for Bale within the limits of this Botoneh, 'any
noxious •or unwholesome vegetables, meat, dab, or
other priTiston, .or if any keeper of a- shop. stall, or,
trackstand shall keep saidshop, atoll, or stand so that
the same is unclean, and noisome smells are - emitted
therefrom, he, she, or they so .offending against the,
provisions of this ordinance shill forfeit and be liable
to pay a flue not less .than three nor more than five
dollars for each
H. offence.
B. • Passed Ma 31; '
SESSINGER. y
Prost. Council. .
Attest-JAMES CRAZE, Town Clerk. .. •
10,884
82,888
12,954
24.711
57,885
64,860
34,891
20.163
8,961
2.214
11,053
.18
1596
, 157
666,
2,072
.2,664
1,166
1,001
21
• -
An ordinance Relating to Lamps and .Lamp
posts.
Be it ordained, &c. That if any person .or persons
shall and do-after the passage of this ordinance, mali
ciously, wIlfully:Or 'wantonly extinguish, break, de
stroy, Nue, overthrow, or carry , away any of the pub-.
lic lamps, lamp pasta - or anything pertaining thereto,
to any of the Streets, lanes, or alleys, within thle We=
ough, every each person so offending, and every terson
table or coucerned in - such offence shill forfeit and
pay for every such offence the sum of . flve
Passed May 31, iS6T.
-... •li. B MESSINGER„ Prent. Council.
Attest-JAMES CRAZE. Town Clerk. "' •
and Canal 11167
20,525-10
15,63 T 10
8,08 04
00
097
13,278 Ob
201 10
19964.10
8,808 11
8,6E5 04
An ordieentellelating to Awnings, Rails and•
Wooden Sheds. • ; • • . ,
Wyo. 1. -Be itsadained, &c., That from and after the
'passing of tide 'ordinance, -every awning rail which
shall remain placed or Axed biany.public street, lane,'
or alley, of the Borough. Tdr the purpose of fastening ,
thereto any awning, shall be at least six, four
inches from the lower side thereof tethe pavement tin
der lt, and .every. person who shall use such raft so
placed and, tinted; which shall not be of the 'height
aforesaid above thepavement, slialiforfeit and pay the
'aura of five dollars:
Szo. - .2. That from and after the passing of. this Intl.:.
Dance all and every rail so placed or. fired its above
mentioned, and all chains, bars or rails between posts
fixed or placed near the gutter in any street, lane, or
alley of this Borough and al wooden sheds over She .
7 pavement in any street, lane, l
le
or alley of this Borough
' are'hereby declared to be common nuisances, and it.'
• shall and maybe lawful for the Chief Burgess, and he'
""
to hereby eniomed and required . to take down and ria.
,e ;6 2 , move the same. Passed Iday 31, 1867. • •
,2618. B. SESSINGER , Prest. Council.
~2 76 . Attest-JAMES egsgg, Town Clerk. ,
5,359 • . '
1 9, 539 . An ordinance regulating the Carrying of Gan
-11,746 powder through the Streets of the Borough of Eit„.
17,114. . .
.089 'Be it ordained, dre., That no pets . =
23 shall convey or
5,013 cane to be conveyed through any of the streets of the
809. Borough, in any cart, wagon or other , carriage; or in
4 84 any railroad can at any onetime, any quantity of gun.
.251 powder without a sheet Of canvas under, around and
-w
223 over the same. sufficient to prevent the same front be
. leg scattered from the said .cart, agon, carriage,' or
• railroad ear , and also the said- gunpowder SomPletely
. covered with wollen stuff, to prevent it being Ignited
from a spark falling upon it. under the penalty of for
feiture of the said gunpowder, and for every such of;
Bfence the anm of twenty-five dollars, to be paid byev,
ery person so offending. Passed May 31,1887. • •
H. B. SESSINGICR, Prost. Council,
'Attest-JAMES MAZE; Town Clerk; . .
23,184 05
51341,409 12
51,743 01
1,990,482 12
690,157 17 •
814,261'04'
2,042,430 18
2,4451,6 1 04
224,093 01
890.421 11
, • . • -
1;00 An ordinance to prevent Persons from interfer
, Jog, meddling , with or using the Fire Plugs, Inthe 80.
rOugp of Bt. Clair. - ' • . • •
t,200 ' 'Be it ordsibedatc. That any person or pensons who,
413 shall Interfere or meddle with or nee any of the fire
,rao ergs within the limits of the said Borough, excepting
,ea 3 e-regulaf members of- either the engine or hose com-
A u patsies during the time of fires, and for the purpose of
:116 washing their Thaeldnery or hose, - without - the written
Ay =sent of a member of the committee on fire appara
,s29 tee, easel be Bible to a fine of twenty-five dollars. to
‘ , 5 84 be recovered for therm of the Borough.. Passed May
,818 SI, I.S6T. •
_L • -
„426 ' H: B. SICSBUIGEB, Prest. Connell...
- Attest—JAHEß CRAZE, Town Clerk.
ss An ordinance felding to goats.. •
I. Be it ordained, &pc That . on and after ten.
,1366
an days from the date of this ordinance" it shall not be
lee lawful for any goat or goats torun at large In the BM ,
,100 cregh limits unless they be hoppled In sueh a manner
reruler them 'unable to leap any bowl; rail, or
other fence of a height of four (4) feet.
8 10 . S. If any goat or goats shall be found at large,
- waren to this ordinance, it shall , be the' duty of the.
High Constable to seize said foo* or goats so found, and
to cause public notice to b~e. of such seizure, and
the owner or owners shall pay a fine of one dollar
(111.00) and costs for every goatso seized. " • .
Sol B. If on the expiration of five days propor
tteel the Oats so seized shall not be claimed and re
deemed by the owner or owner% it shall be lawful for
the MO ionstidlt bolding such goats to sell the
same at public Sale. ".The proceeds of said sale, after
payment of fine and costs, shall be ter the poor of the
BO S a eo.4. It shall be the duty of the Chief Burgess to
see the ordinance carried into strict effect, to purchase
food, and have the animals properly cared for and he
way authorize persons to capture goats running at large
In violation of this ordinance,' end pay the- person so
employed one dollar (31:00) for every goat captured
and'delivered:, Passed June 29, leer. - •
'H. B. imesINGER , .
AttAIit—JAXES CRAM; Town Morn:
. . •
Ai - ordibesnatte• requiring the Police 'to meet
mßni'Bo it ordained; Ac ! ..That on and after the passige of
thiaordhumee. theyokice force ot.the Amin& of St.
Clairshall he reciu-d to meet monthly at their piece
of meettmt in the tesement of the council-mom.. dII
Parmaa Mg this ordinance 'without a reasonable
excuse approved of by the chief Bunsen, shalL forfeit
and MY a fine of fifty tiro) cents for each and erten , ey.
inns. Said fines to be collected as other fines are by
Utw reernahle- . Pasted Jane 24186 y. ,- • •
8 B. MISSINGNE; Prost. Oeincii.
AttiiiitAlODl ORA= Town Clerk. . •
. .„„ . - • .
* eiVitata ince to Prevent Dogs frout.Ranntag et
lionouglot R.OlRlttwttiout being agog.
Beatsleds %tit trom mid situ tie fink dag
Cl loos, volume armada of November, dogs snd
bitches mania et large within the limits of Da Bor
omit
_of Eit, wgiout good, sabstantlal.anumdeo.
rndilleir mouths and now are declared public nui
sances. Ellppeerfmonsviolatingthis ordinance studipacr
sine of act less than Ifty cents, nor alimr.lhati.orte
dotter for the =rot lie Bmough. said , Mien to tart&
_rind McAbee szp. rearreaPi /UlO
" itiii;4/#ll6l/4 15 4 6341"."(611L H...
MINS To 1 01' • - • •- IPA
. • ,
UNION PACIFIC
RAILROAD COMPANY,
WIRIER FIRST 111oRTWE RODS
,The rapid
~Positess of t tizdna. Pinhic Rafted.
nnisbrildteg west trtat Omaha. Nebraska. and Form
!¢g; with' tts *dun connections. an unbroken lhze
eTwe the op attracts attention ,to theialue at
the 'First Mortgage liondoitki the Company now of
ferto the: publie..":Ths &Ist question asked by ppsdent
hireetortrjs; - "lre Caste binidi securer- %wt. 4 tAse
they sz prof,ltable,inveidinititt r.. TO tardy M Inter:
lEt." The ratly . Cataidethnt of the whole great line to
thePacifichiai cerhan as anitature Mildness ; event San
:be. The Ekroirsanent• grant of ow twenty million
aces of land and 4fitudil ion, &Mad in its own bonds ,
practically guarantees it. Che fourth of the work is al
ready done, and - the - hank continues to be laid at the
rate of , two mike a . • •
2d. The Union PatifiC Witted bonds are Issued ae
on what promises to bi - One of the maiprofitable lintel
of railroad in the musky., For many yM•• re it must be
the only,litet connecting the Atlantic and Pacific : and
being wittumt competition; it can maintain re minima
, •
- . .
• *.iii.,o* - Mike 'ot this 'road - are , finished, arid frilly .
eel:dined wiiii depots, locomotives, rais;itcl, and two.
trains are daily ranting each,way. The materials for
theremainhig WOO* to the eastern Wreathe Rocky
Mountain are on hand, and it. Is under Contract to be
done in September.
,4th. The net awnings of the Bectlair already. finished
are eeveral times greater than the gold interest upon.'
the First Mortgage Bonds Moop.such Sections, and If
not-another mile' of read were. bat,' the
. part al
reifteMcipleted would not only pay Interest and ex
penses, but be profltable to the' Company. ~ - . -
6th, - Thou:Nadu Pacific Railroad bonds can be Issued'
only as the road progteeaes, and therefore can =Ter be
In the Market airless I* represent a some sea pro-
Perty
6th: Their =opt is strictly liMited by law to a sum
eqiuil to what Is granted : by the V. S. Goiernmer t; and
for which-It takes a-sierind liert•se- Re security. This
amount .nPoir Meant Isl7_irigeil - - west from oMaha is
only $16,900 per mile.. •
_•• _
a l
Ith. - The fsetthit the U. S. Government con dere a
second lien .mem the road . a' ood Investment d that
some of the shrewdest railroad bnildera of the ®try
have already paid in five million. dollars upon the stock
(which to to them a third lie* may well inspire confi
dence it a flietllet.-
Bth. Althongh, it is not claimed that there can be any.
.better securities* than Governments. there as
whdoonsider !fret mortgage upon such a pr ows
this the rextbeat sec:nifty in the world,a t i .: u n il ho sell
their iloveiametits to reinvest In these —.thus
sectinng a greaterinterest;
9th: As the Union Paclfic-Rallroad tcn:a+.fti arefoffered
for the , present at 90 cents on the dollar and accrued In
.terest, they are the 'Cheeped security in the 'market,
being rdiare than IQ per cent. less that U. S. Stocks.
SUE. At the current rate of Tuataluiti on gold, they
Orer Nine per Cent Interest.
The daily auliactiptiosui are 'already :large; and they
will continue to be wend in New York t 3; the
CONTINENTAL NATIONAL BANIC,.NO. 1 as!at! St.,
Doix}z & Co., Bmanal.B, NO. 51 Wall St.,
Joni J. Czech, & BiNxissit, 'No., 83 Wall. St..
and by BANKS AND BANKERS generally through
out the United States, of whom maps and descriptive
pamphlets may be obtained. They willalso be sent by
mail from the Companrs Office, No. 20 Nasean Street.
New York, on application. Subscribers will select their
"own Agents in whoin they have confidence, whO alone
will be respossitole to them for the safe delivery of the
JOAN 1. - ClSCO',Treasi,
gne 8, 44. 234 m. •
• • VStlitE - 110PE.
• ''_,_' ciF l t: ° i 9 ,l;:' , . . The subscribers,' " agents foi
ci'F s t •• v , -GA e RNOCR ‘ , BIBBY & CO.'S'
• w
Celebrated Steel (and - Charcoal
ib ,1) f. 7. Wire Ro . for'Mince, Inclined
i f ,;.: I ''' I ..- 0 " . tc,Planes, Bridges : 'Derricks; and
,• ''..1....^` , 1Z,. •,r2 i.i . Roisting • purposes. Also Gal- e
11.i . ' kki v- ' - , fa_ ' squalseakautrceal and B. B. Rope
t '''' for Ships' Standing Rigging,
-{„... ••• . 4,
• ....q. ~' Stays, Guys. &c. • •
`,..*0 - '•..- - ‘ - .V. - t' A .large oteck constantly on
---"'" ' • h and.-Orders tilled wirti-dis
c,als-vos,-,•t • 1
-ilsz-3,\•••: e tt , patch. For further particulars
- ---- - ‘,,• as to . price. tett,: weight: and
- • , working strain, apply to •Ildin
neCircniar to ',. JOHN W. MASON & CO.,
Sept 15, 16—sz.ly • . . 43 Broadway, N. Y.
CEIIWARE, THEN JUDGE.
. . . .. .
Greatrednettori In Wholesale and , Retail • Prices of
very Suirarlor Silver egad Silver-Plated Wares
of onr own manufacture, • - ,
•„ .• - Stich es• Tea Sete; Urns, Ice , • .
".i,••:-..._.„.---i
.. Filchers, - Walters, Goblets, .... . .
Cake BasketeXastora, But- l i ,
'ter'Coblere; Negetable.Dlsb-.
~".-.... .- .
.:,......7 ”. es, Tureens, Sugar and Card lei;
IS '., Baskets . Syrup and Drinking - '"':,
...., - , -- .•ig -- "„ . i.... Cups; ' Knives, Forks rand .4. • . .
-fr.. •, • - Spoon& of various `kinds, •••
• - ''''':.. . &e ~ &o, .WARRANTED . 4
'Till - Ka PLATE: on best ormetars; and to be no bet
ter in market, and of the LATBST STYLES, where no
: goods are gdsrepresented, at: •
, • . - JOHN* BOWMAN'S ', '
• . NEW N 1) :BEAUTIFUL STORE
. ..
.1110. 7 . 01 'Arch Street, Philadelphia.
re - Please call and examine onr Gondq before purch
asing. .. N. 8. - ,—All.khida of PLATING at reronabli
• ' • - - l'f, y
prices- . Ang.l7, .
Metract,of Beef for makingßeef Tea;
1/ Bops, . . ' ' J 1 ,70. 0. BECK.
. . ,
WHAT EVERlirstotov,witniws.—Best ,
of' certimon and pure: Older Vinegaecan be had,
at C:•Barlers, East Market St. between Centre and .
Railroad Stn., Postern Bnildiuk. • • • CHAS. BARLET.
-August 10,-VIL •-•- - • - - - - -32 . 4 c. •
.11Alalp'EM.11;, M.
LT/... Homeopntbiie P pa felon,
Has located at this place. Office atllint. dontraVlclorth•
west corner sth and Market streets, Pottsville; Pa.-
Office honre,..l to 9, A. M., and 2 and T to ,9, P. M.
Iter - Can be consulted In German,
Atignarlo, taT
. - -
BORDENTOWIN FEMALE COLLEGE
BORDfiNTOWIq, N. J.
.
An In.titution for the careful and thomngh instruc
tion of Young Ladies in all the branches of a com
plete education, Board and tuition In the Preparatory
and Collegiate departments, $203 per year. Washing.
Ancient and- Modern Languages, and ornamental
branches. extra. ' Winter Session opens September
19th: For Catalogues. addreis
' • Rev. JOHN H. BRARBLEY, A. M., President. •
August 10, 417 . . • 32-4 t
"BEYOND THE MISSISSIPPI :"
A complete History of the . New States and territo
ries, from the - Great Riven to the Great Ocean.-:..8y
Albert D. Richardson.'. OVER 20,000 COPIES SOLD
IN ONE MONTH:_ ~the and Adventure on Prairies,
Mountains and the Pacific Coast - With over2oo De
scriptive and Photographic Views of the Scenery, Cit.:
IaP,T.AndS Mlnes,.People and Curiosities of the New.
States and Territories. To prospective emigrants and
settlers in the 'Tar West^ this History of that vast
and fertile region will priwe an invaluable assistance,.
tint:Vying as it does a want long leiter a tall, autlien•
tic and reliable guide to climate, soil,lnoducts, means
of travel, &c., &c.
AGENTS: WANTED.—Sen d • foi Circulars 'and see
our TermS, and ELISE description of the work. . Ad.
dress NATIONAL POTIIJBLIING CO., .507 Minor St.,
.Philadelphia, Pa .
. .
AN ORDINANCE in Relation to ..Licen
sewfor IP'ublic Exhibitions ,& Circuses.
Be it ordained and enacted 'by the Town Council of
- the Borough of Pottsville, and it ie . hereby enacted by
'the authority of the same. ' '
thrcrion I... That all • public .exhibitions lexcepting
enteral curiosities) shalt pay to the Chief Durgeser,for
the nee of the Borough. a KM not lase than One nor
more than TiventirTfive Dollar., except Mt crises.
which ehalipay not less than Thirty nor more than
Fifty Dollars ,for each day's exhibition. • , •
SPOTTON 2 • That all ordinances in conflict with the
r ordinance; evisions of thiserdinan, be and the same are here,
by repealed. -
Enacted and passed into an ordinance. at Pottsville,
this 6th day of August, A. D., one thousand eight hut
dred and sixty.geyen;
• _ SAMUEL HEFFNER; Presidetit. '
Attest: A. K. Wurrszn, Town Clerk.
August 10.'6T- . ..• '
• . •
'IRON WORKS FOR SAJLE„.-The under
signedL. offers at private bale the Ilamptoia For-
Imes Property, situated in Lehigh county, 8 miles.
'from Millerstown, a station on the East. Penna.
road— BelnngLug to it . are 90 acres of
land, 50 acres of which is of She best :011111
farming laud. Also, a fine new Man- , 1881 11 514:11
glen Bonze, 9 Tenant houses, nearly all' h4,, r
as good as • new, a large Barn for Ave
teams, Coal . shed,. to hold 150 loads of Coal, new
Bridge House , and Casting House and blacksmith
The Water-power is good, always . having' enough
Water to insure a strong blast., A new Dam, sufficient
for all purposes, was built two years. rigo--Water.",
wheel and Bellowarda good as new. •
The Teams end other personal property and also the
undivided half of a. yaluable Bed .of Magnetic Iron
' Ore will also be sold private, and, at reasonable I erms.
,These Works are only for making Cold Blast Charcoal'
Metal, which is the best kind for Car. Wheels, and has
also been need for Army and Navy guns.
More Iron has been made, at these works per. .week,.
than at any other works of like sue, (except two), in
any of the adjoining counties. -
First growth timber is plenty within aradlus. of 1 . 0
and enough can always ,be had to make a fall
blast. Good Hematite Ore is near enough- to haul
. with tams. Limestones are .within a quarter of a
As much possession .as is necessary to prepare for
next year's blast will be given to the purchasers. -
This le a rare chance for those wishing to engage in
this business; and Is worth the attention of parties
. who need Charcoal metal for Car _Wheelie and other
PurPosee. • • .
Farther information will be given by:addressing the
undensigned at Macungie r. 0., Lehigh county. Pa.
. H. M. SIGMUND.
Hampton Furnace, July 25, WI 22.2 m•
MUSIC: MUSIC !I • MUSIC !
- The Bt. allair Union Baud are now Omitted
to make engagements to furnisin Parties, Parades, 85c.,
with music. Address, AUGUSTUS LOMB%
Aug. 5, '6l 81.4 t.
St. Clair, Schuylkill Co., Pa.
OUNTY PRISON.:-Tickets of admhadon to
‘ l .- • the County Priam will hereafter be homed on the
SECOND and FOURTH. WEDNESDAYS - of each
month. Pelsonalriehing to,visit the Prison; should ap
ply on those days, as tickets will . not be given at any.
- other time. BENJAMIN-EVERT;} - •
GEORGE WILSON,' Illemnals.ens.
• . TOWARD KERNS.
Arriarr-.P. W: Bechtel, clerk. • • • ' •
,Commiteens , Office, Pottsville;' Aug. S. sm-SI
BLOOD.! BLOOD!! BLO OD.!! I
illedzess Blood Parifyhtig ffloat.=Thes
Great Iteosedy of the day, to Purify. Bleed.
. Thousands of lives' could be saved misty by the
timely, we of a remedy to renovate tae blood, and
purge out the corruptions 'that breed In It, and carry"
their poison to every part of the system. .. The pro.
prietor bite keg felt the necessity for a medicine
specially intended to operate um) the blood, and has
at last areceeded by a combination of the meat, vain-
able and. powerful vegetable ingredients known to
medical ecce, in preparing a remedy which. upon a
fall and simple trial, has, been found one of the most
effectual blood *eiders ever offered to the public. It
is admitted by all who have tried it to be superior to.
any similar _preparation, and many certilkates have
been received testifying to the ewes effected bV it, a
few of which. can be seen on the circular accempassy
, ing the medicine. • It is also an excellent tonic In
cases of general debility: . Mothers will And It aspect;
ally effective for children - afflicted with sores or era
Alone of, any Idud. Be - sure and ask for MAIZ6'S
'BLOOD PITHIPTING AGENT. 'Try-It. and sniffer no
I morn. Prepared. by H. D. MAIZE, at his Drug Store,
Ashland, Pa.,
a nd for sale at thenrincipal Drug Stores
In tbe County. , • „August . . -
t - - . - -
U. lilaur:t•A small lot of Bye Maar on. band
and for odd -• • • by'. CRAB; IL HUM
July 6--91- ld.Centre Br.. Morris' Eddithrn.
- - .IVJAIDOWAY & SON, -
ti *
COAL "Co ISSION lIMBECIIANTIIIy
ottsville, Psi, • ' • -.-
;.. . • -
WM .nvibase any ikartbas . wishing, uOr'kind of
Coal, mined in Tr= Coniny. ' A.zementable cow.
- amid= win be id. • • • - .
Ang. 11, 167-81. , , • -D. S.-IfIfeiNV.S.T & 80N:.. .
3301:7 c?.'1 . 7...3P TES(
AND
CUT S FLOWERS :"
Pas aux AT Wooa xv BY;
101 l IT, INT WAR
110 1 „DISSOILIITiON011- CO.PAILET.
is hereby given that
the ColPutualthip heretofore Waling between the tm
trt the wholesale , prolDion boaluess tmder
tl - 7 . 7irime . Of • D & HEBREW is this day
dissolved by."mutual anumult.. • Those having claims
against the 'isle firm will preeent them to Jacob
Del
bert, Jr., and those - indebted , to the Arm will make
payment to . the same. . JACOB DELBERT, Js..,
• Schnyibill Raven. /Mg. izasea..
OTICE.--The co-pettneistk beretotee
eilettng between the unarms tinder*.
Aim name of W. tdc .1: Hams; Is hereby dissolved by
•mutual consent. The ' towhees will be continued by
JnHelms, who Is authorised to collect .111 monies
des to the late arm. - • WILLIAM KELM% ;
Ashland. Ang. 9, WT. Vita' JOHN )1110113.
tgr,;ivirries.—An moat having badness
with Constable Obriamwo, hereafter wilt And
Worst F. W. Cooradw offices earner Centre ant . Mar
kat- Sta.. aetwid atm*, 'twat - room, AU wins left at
his office will be promptlyettended to:
IigaziNOTIVII Is hereby given that the co-Opat
nership heretofore emoting-between B.
Boone and 4. W. Reiter. of the Borough of St. Clair. -
under the name of Boone & Better, is Medley die-.
solved by mutual consent. The business of said firm
will be settleditoyli. Boone. -B. BOONS. • • .
• Op W. BliaTia
• The basinesi will hereafter be continued at the old
stand by the underslgr.ed. • R. BOONS.
St. Clair. Aug. .at.. • 82-ISt•
.TO LITSQVENTIL—Notice fa
' lo b .hereby given that all' deeds for lots in Xt.
Cancel Cemetery, that are not taken up within 3 mos.
from this date will - be forfeited. Deeds will be de
livered on application to HENRY C. RIISSEZL, Tress.
Anton. - .• - - • 82-3 C -
113117. COLLECTORS , ,
Pottsville.. Augural 3d, 1867.—N0-'
Eke is hereby given that on t Sikh day. of July, 1867,
1 seized upon a lot of cigars and tobacco at the house
of Jerome Bober. Best - Bmnswick Township, Schuyl
kill County, said articles having been found in his
tvesession with design to avoid the payment of the U.
B. taxes under the Internal Revenue laws. per-'.
eons claiming the above articles are bereby notified to
appear at this office and make claim within thirty days
.from the Sd day of August, 1867, arco:ding to the act
of Congress in etch' wes made and provided.
JAMES INNE BS , Collector 10th Vat.. Pa.'
Aug 3, .61 ' 31-St . 1
NOTICE is hereby given to all - whom it
• may concern, not to interfere with the two
Mules now to possession of Wm. Misstep, as they be
long to . • - - • WM. GBLKBf24IOI..
batty • I Haven, July 12, • 29-
- -
NOTIOE..—The public is hereby am
. Cloned against traveling upon that , portion
the lands upon which is located the rmd
of lead
ing - St. Clair to Mabanoy City, between the Mount
Hope .pe and the summit of Mine Hill, as the great
er part f this distance is uncLlrmlned by the coal
workin . of George W. Johns Jr Bm., and liable to
fan in . any time. J. M. WETHERILL; -
July • 0-29.6 l - Agent for owners of Lea:Land.
THE Co:Paitnerehip heretofore ex
.' ‹..... listing between the undersigned, is this day
i r
dissolv . brinntual consent.
R.
• •
• • . Signed, -.. • .J. R. WATS, •• •
. THOS. O. PARISH,
New ork, Jelylo, 164 T . 29. • - !
. .
PATENT CM PROVERIENT OF
=STEAM.: EtiE.....To an whom it.
may Co ncern :— For. aid in consideration of, 6.
in hand, paid by JAMES WREN of the Borough
Pottsville, Cosa yof Sr.huyliciL to Lewis Elken
of Philadelphia, the receipt whereof has been acknow -
;WRithe said Eikenberry ' sold to - said JAMES
the right to apply it td the of Schuyl
kill, State of Pennsyltema; on all Steam ell uow
in use br that may hereafter be used, Lewis bar
tacntair
ryis Taitroved Cut-off for Economia
Steam' - by' Expansio n. -4 for which letters
ent, dated _November 19, IS6I, have been - to
the said Lewis Eikenberry by the United S .1
All
persons desirous -of information regarding the benefit
of this Valve can receive the same at my dike in Coal
street. The benefit of this Valve to all penman ndng
Steam Engines is from 20 to Co per cent. on the beet
engines built It can be applied to all old engines. - •
Mathluists are requested to take part in this insPo l ‘
ant improvement, They can secure from inc the use
for building new engines and also for putting the im
provement on old engines. They can - see the motion
at my works in Coal street, where I have it on my en
gine working to the savings herein stated. It also can
'be, seen at Ruch do Evan's Mill, at Atkins & .8r06.1
and Palo Alto Rolling Kid. JAMES WREN,
' ' - Washington Iron Works.
Pottsville, Feb. 47, '66 :
LEGAL. NOTICES.
rN TUE O.I(PHANS , COURT' OF
19101110111LHILE.COUNTY.
In the matter of the estate of George Brrunm, decd.
The undersigned, appointed Auditor by the Court to
make distribution of the moneys in the hands of Geo.
W. Brttthm, actthg executor of said deceased. as per re
port of the Auditor restating and resettling the account
of said executor, will meet the parties interested, for
the,pnrPose of his appointment, on FRIDAY, the 6th
day of September, 1667, at 2 o'clock, P. rd., at his of
fice, N0.191' Centre street, Pottsville.
.- • wilITAm. R. mug, Auditoi.
Angnst VT ; '97" • . • 93-St
IN 'Flak COVUT OF COPIRKON FLEAS
' OF 8 tionvirtamiLL COVINTY.
M. M. Ketner,
. vs. t, 72, June Term,ma. .. .
• Danl. Haley and
e l Vend Zap.
• George Geiger. Money ln Court. $615 61..'
The undersign , auditor appointed by the said
Court..to make distribution of the moneys In Court
upon the above stated V. rid. Exp., herebruives notice
that he will meet theparties interested, for the purpose
of his appointment, on Saturday, the Slat day of Aug..
1867, at hie °Mee in the Borough of Pottsville, at 2
o'clock, P. M. • - ' WM. It: SMITH, Auditor.
Aug. IT, '67.: . - - . 33-St
Iry ' THE ORPHANS'' CO" U T,OF "
SCHUYLKILL - COUNTY.
In the matter of the exCeptions to the account of
Reuben B. lituitzinger and David Statzman, executors
of the last will of George Hontenger, deceased.
The undereigned, auditor appointed to restate and re.
settle said account and to make distributions of the
moneys remaining In the hands of the execntori., Wand
among those entitled_to the-same. will attend to the
duties of hi appointment at bla office to. the Borough
of Pottsville, on Saturday: the 31st day. of August, at
10 o'clock,' fn the forenoon of.said day, when and where
all purlieu Interested are hereby notified to attend.
FRANCIS P. DRWREDEcluditor.
Pottsville., Aug. 11,'07.. - 83.8 t
-•
IN TICE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
- OF iSCHIIIELKILL .10 OUNTV. ,
• Ctunies.Cawley, .
vs..FL Fu, 198, Juni T., 1881.
H. D. Rethermel and
H. T. Moues, I Money in Court, $1,821. 88..
6815, Jane T.;1861. . •
The endenigned, auditor appointed by said Court to
distribute the money made on the above execution to
the parties . Justly entitled to the same, will• attend to
the duties of his appointment at his office, In the Bor
ough of Pottsville, on Friday, the .80th day of August,
at 10 - o'clock, in the forenoon of said day,• when, and
where all parties interested are hereby notified tb at
tend. • .FRANCIS P. DEWBBS, Auditor. • •
-Potbwille, Aug. 17, 417.
LIXECII4OIIVS NOTlCE:—Whereaa, the
,enders fined having been appointed executors of
the estate of. William M. Davies, late. of St. Clair, de
coased,—Notice is hereby given to those having claims
against said estate to make application, !and those in
debted to the same to ranks payment • - •
MARY DAVIN& 1
JNO. DAlTilifij ors.
BS St'
August 10.'.67
VOTATO OF SARAH IL WILDII3.—:
The,undersigned. appointed Auditor by the Orph
ans' Court Of Schuylkill County, to report distribution
of, the balance in the hands of John Seitzinger, Eon
Trustee for. the sale of real estate of the decedent, will
meet the parties interested, for the purpose of his ap
pointment, on Tuesday, the 23th day of August, 1867.
at 10 o'clock, A. 2d . at his Office. No. 16 Hattantongo
St, Pottsville. • CHRISTOPHER urns; Auditor.
Aug 3. . 131-11t* . •
TN TAB COURT OF. COMMON PLEAS
1 OF 11401.1UY LKIILL COUNTY. • -
Cora. of Pe., ex. rel., drc.,
468 Dec. T , 180.
• ROBERT-ADAMS..•
The undersigned,. Auditor, appointed by the said
Court to audit, restate and resettle . the accoubt of
RdwardMamilton. Committee of said Robert Adams,
a lunatic, hereby gives notice, that he will attend for
that purpose. at his office ha the Borough ot Pottsvile,
on Monday;the 19th day of August, A . Auditor . at
10 o'clock, A.M. - JOHN I'. HOBART
July 29, .61 _ • Blat
IN TUE OgiPIIANEP COURT• 01?
ISCIIIVICLIELLI. COUNTY:-7n the mat
ter of the exception to the.. account of Henry Berk
heeler,' Administrator of Willizun Berkheleer, deceased.
The undersigned. Auditor, appointed by the Court
to reatate and resettle said account, and to make dis
tribution of the' balance remaining in the bandit of
said admimstiator, to and among those entitled there
to,—hereby gives notice to all persons interested
therein; that he will attend for the purpose aforesaid
at Ideoince in the Boinugh of Pottsville. on Thursday,
the 22d day of *A'nguat, 2267. at 10 o'clock, A. M.
July 29,11'1—net JOHN P. HO,I3AHT. Auditor.
.0 @MATZ OF JOHN G. GRO WN, late
of Pottsville, deceased. Letters of administra.
tion upon said estate having been duly granted to the
undersigned,—All persons indebted to the estate are
requested to make payment, and those having claims
against:the same to preeent them without delay to .
CHBISTOI 3 BER LITTLE. Administrator, .
July 20-49-6 t Ncs..l6, Mitlutntqngo St., Pottsville.
tIIOIINISTRATOJEVM MOTICM..--Letters
'of administmtion upon the estate of tleorge Bat
teiger, late of West Brunswick Township, Schnylidll
County, deceased, having bent• grented to the under
signed, residing in the Berough: of Pottsville,—All
persons indebted to Said estate are requested to make
payment and those having claims or demands against.
the same will resent them without delay.
WILLIAM R. SMITH, Administrator.
28.6 t
July 13; 'GT
WANTED.
.
TANTED.—A Sixty,horse Engine, second-hand
• ed, W. good order. for CASH. Apply with fall
particulars to Box 192'. Mahanoy City. 89 tf
.10(TA !SITED 'IIII2II.EISIATELY..-' 2OO Coal
v Miners to wort in La Salle, Illinois. Wages $125
per ton. A man =mine from Bto Stone per day.--
Vein from (to 7 feet deep t Beet mines in the West.
Apply to NICHOLS & VANSANDS,
Angle-82-W. 100 b 187115011 St.; Chicago. 111.
CANDIDATES.
.
dicers Minaret Jourvaal.....GENTs
18 11 2► .1 - I Permit us; in view - of the approaching
meeting of the Republican Convention for the nomi
nation of County. Officers. tio suggest - the name of
Gen. GEORGE C. WYRHOOP as a candidate for the
Sheriffelty. His record as a loyal soldier. and citizen,
is so well known to the people of the County, and as he
lain every way qualified for the position. we feel he
Would be one of the strongest men that could be nom
inated. . MAHANCY AND ASHLAND.
Jane 29, .6T 264 c
D. A. SMITH,
MERCHANT TAILOR.
CENTRE ST., POTTSVILLE, PA.
April. T. '5B 144 f
Plows. Harrows, Cultivators, Horse Bakes,
other farming. Implements. at
23- " BRIGHT & CO'B, Pottsville.
.H.•K..WESTON
9 •
AGENT FOR THE SALE OF
LUBRICATING OIL. , T RAILS, MIST IRON,
BALED HAY, WIRE ROPE, ,Itt. OM re Centre St.,
ad door SUltman's , Ballding_--entrance next ' door to
Masonic . July 13, .67-28-am•
QOils OH. :---Cntd. Whale. UM. Spurn,
Lubricating. All prints and kinds.
ga. , BRIGHT & CO.. Pot/avian.
THE ART OF OIIMNGDRESBES.
DRESS TRIMMEN, EMBROIDERY, &o
SLITS. 'HUTCHINSON, Second Street, below
Market, Pottsville, respectfully inform the ladies of
Pottrwille and victnity desirous oflearning the art of cut.
ting Thome, Baum. Horns, Jackets, Gored Dm"
acts, Wrappers, dren's and all new styles of Street
and Houee Garments, that she holor sale Mrs. H. M.
ters Lately Improved Models, nowmrtensively
nsed by th e most fashionable dreasinakeni. Two
hours' instruction will enable any lady cut and lit ,
dresses equal to a dress maker. . • -
Mrs. Hutchinson has on hand's choice assortment
of - zephyrs ; wools and yarns t zephyr pattern canvas
silk, worsted and cotton coat ancidzesa buttons, Trim.
mings and Haim Magic- and Coventry lianas
and Sliver Braid sod. Beads ;
M a it in =ilk, Linen, •
Cotton and Mohair; Hu
broideey and Sewing Silk, and Silk Braids; Knitttog,
Crochet, Af and- Bohn Needles: Linen, Floes
pad CrochatMrod and Braid • French Working and
Eir ab Wottcm; Stamped Goods for. Braldligiard
airzmbnadery; Machine Stftebing • Plain Sewing
Stimplim done promptly to order.
Eir/Lri. a. has an hand a choice assortment of Oa
Metall:aiding and Bmb for Ladies , and
dresses, to w=se di h mi l i gas attention._
April 27, . . • , 11- td. '
T _l= l3 E l 4 =mum Timmins AND
SILLS.—The inabscriber Ii now prepared to
manufacture to order all kLuds of Oak L'"" at shod
notice. DM, Mils of 6 and 6ji feet length slices on
hand.. Mao Vence Poste. All tirade of Prop Maker
to older: Orders respectfully solicited.
• • PAUL BOO& New Ringgold
. 36 7 13, 411-1112zu Ethand3lo3.*
tilel.:4011111 11":01atiocilm44111-4""ligt°t1
bald At eite chew DT the anerA
MEE
UOR ISALE...Ic lot of and inch Wire Hope,
tit for Slope or Planes.-Apply to J. B. WILSON, at
Gordon Plaice &blipped:l County:- Aug_
Fela Iddiftle.—Fieveral tracts Of Coal and Iron
Lend in Colorado, within about ten miles of Den
ver: Ctirliht Ito aggregate about two' thousand
.scree, lutown to =daft' about eight miles of coal
*due
du , With the saute amount of tron ore. For wilco:
addresi W. d.. MaSialit. Denver, Colorado.
kust MT • • • sd-tf
.. .. ... , ~
/IWO aopenlor.Painfly Bay Roma for alio ; T years
A old , abentlkY bandiAch : s Seariders : tree
trona trick or aloe of SAY Dinat,,_,' ' 1312 7 3t a z
the saddle: - - /iliki an • open sup and
bused* all In tip
hu l tic order. 1* are
want of use. . Pot 117
_to
Aug 17-334 t• - J. r i n lllll N, **mon. Pa.
delthltble dl_ifillg b 3486 on tlas
isomer of Tremont and East streets,l3k
In the liorovnfli of Potteville, near tberoddenos
Of P. W.-Hughes, Iteqi . 'Attached Is a dna gar
den filled with an atutadruce of fruit trees of Tortoni
kinds. • Th e lot is 'St feet in trent and about 900 feet
in depth: The house is In good repair., Immediate
possession can be Oven. Apply to _ • •
Aug. IT, . 83-4 Z P. DEMOS.
131111VATII ' SALE . . OF . NAMEABLE
A REAL 111ITAT16.—The lindersigned offers
for isle the following real estate...situate nearli .
the town of Lentil: oo N: Bern' Totntabip, Berta
County, on the Bm,ding and Philadelphia Rail,
road.-eight - m vi ileffrom •idin' and eight miles from
ylambarg,
Brick
.• • •I • • -
No. I. A twolitory . B Tavern; at by 52 feet, with
excellent stabling,' • . _ _ • .
No. 2. A two-story Brick Store ROM. 22 by 86 feet.
No. IL A twostory Frame banding, IS try 26 fest.
Also,
are
good banding lots •IN by 180 feet ne
=are all supplied with excellent water. - All
fruit of the best quality may be found on the
place.: It Le one the beet -plwa for a lumber
and coal yard, w sko
hich of
business has. beerrcarried on
there far
,a number 'of year". •
.
The pet:many will be sold altogether or in park For
farther particulitra apply , to • , •-• •
B TOBIAS..
LeeliFurt. Motet le, .6TABRAW B. .33.
10011 5A1.M....& • Wheeler and Willa:or . ' Sewing
Machine, very near new, in perfect order.. Price
reasonable. Enquire at B. Ban= & Co.'s Bookstore.
mg. tole' • • . 8t
FOll E 3A LIC.64A valuable tract of Timber lend
containing grti acres, situated in Bast Brunswick
Township, Schuylkill tbunty. within three miss of
the Little Stintydrill Railroad. together with a Steam
Circular Saw Mill in good running order. Part of the
abate land tacker and in good farming condition,
whereon are erected all the necessary farm buildings.
Terms easy.. Appl toB. 8. SALLIDAY,
12-5? • New R inggold, Schuylkill Co., Pa.
GBANTVELLIT.—Lote for sale in the new town
.of GRANTVIII,E, situate oh the headwaters of
, Creek: one and a half miles south of Ittahmtoy
City, sad immediately must of the large colliery of the
New Boston Coal Company. The public road from
Pottsville tnklattartoy, City. and - also from Brockville
and Tummies, pewee through the place. • Good water
=be had in abundance. The location ta.couvenlent
to a number of collieries In theFlSHalt Maliatio , Region. For
'terms; ac., apply to - ALLEN ,neer at the
' place. br to the anbecriben MURP HY Pottsville.
August 10, . . • MU
A LARGE LOT OF lIIITKINGJEL& CHL
A
NERY FOR•SALE. • -
Steam Engines of the following dimensions and power:
Oriel& inch cylinder, Dif inch stroke, 60 horse power.
One 16 " - 48 " •60 " "
00 ,,, 44 4 0 .. 4 0 a. 66
. o ne 12 24 46 2 0 .u.
One . •44 Bo 12 66 64
One " " 24 " " 10 " . 4 -
Three 4 " " 10 " " 4 " "
One 40-horse power Steam Engine with Pump, Gearing
andi foot Hoisting Drum. The Shafts are all wrought
• One 19-horse power Engine with, Flue Boiler and all
connections in good order. • '
One.lo horse Portable Engine in first rate order.
Steam Sollars of the following dimensions -
9 second-band Boilers, 48 inch diameter, 29 feet long
4 " 61 84 66 .4• SO 66 44
4 24 44 '46 SO 44 46
9 46 . u 21 II 12 It 0 •
6 64 44 SO ' 20 • 0 •
9 new u - 20 46 h 2 0 I, IS
II So 46 it II
One second-hand Pine Boiler, 80 inch diameter, 19
foot long with two 10 inch flues.. . .
Two water Boilers on wheels, all complete.
Two Smoke Stacks., •
Twenty-six large Drift Cara, 44.inch'gauge.
-Two a
amp Care.
Pour is of Breaker Rolls, .differint sires.
Five oisting Brume from 2to 10 feet diameter,
several vy Pump Wheels and Shafts. ..
A lot f 8 inch column-Pipe. . - •
A lot f S inch Hoboy Pipe. - '
One 1 inch Pole Pump complete, -with. 90 yards of,
ColumniPipe. . ...
Aon ton Platform Scale.
One Lever Punch for screen or boner work. A lot
of &hate-Oates, Slides and Dust Screens; several
large wrought iron Shafts ; also about 40 tons of now
T l 4 11, 22 %a. to the yard. At the - . •
Machinery Depot, onCoal ntreet t
JA.BEZ SPARKS.
Ang.lo, '6T . 82-
VOR ISALE..-The property of Geo. Wooley on
.1: Third street, In the Borough 'of Pottsville,A
consisting of ,two Double Yrame .Homm, and
one Double Frame House on the rear of lot prop
erty on Third St. Terms and conditions made known
by JAMES WOOLEY, New Philadelphia;
or by GEORGE WOQLEY on the . premises.
. July 13, .6T . 284 f
A Bare' cbramee for Spreulatiro.—FUß
.0„ SALB. . •
The well:known Tavern Stand known as the BEMS
COUNTY HOUSE in Penn between 7th and Bth ate*,
Reading, Pa. Also, the Three Story Building now oc
cupied by Bard &Heber% • Hardware Store. Also,
the Large Store Stand .occapied by . William fin!
ambits & Co., lately occupied. by Geo. Levan & Co.
The above • properties are all adjoining each other
and contain 90 feet front and 270 feet in depth, and will
be sold together. The tavern stand is one of the lar
gest and best In the city of Beading., A new brick sta
ble capable of containing at least three hundred horse*
August 8, .87 • -81.8 t • '
VALVABLE BIISINESSETAND AND
BASIN PROPERTY' FOR HALEI..
The undersigned offers at private sale the well known
Basin property, known as Princeton Basin, 'on the
Delaware and Raritan Canal, consisting of nearly five
acres, together with extensive Coal and lumber yards
and sheds. To parties wishing to engage in the coal
'and lumber , badness, the - above • properkr offers in
ducements not often "to be diet with, as a very heaiy •
business is .transacted here; being of a central position
between Trenton and New firanswick, a large wentry
trade centres here. The property is in' good repair.—
The wharfage and rent of that part which is not occu
pied to carry on the business, will marls , pay the in-
Wrest on the costar the property. Having been close
ly confined to business for. ten years Past, it is my de
sire to relinquish it, as there is no. necessity for my
carrying Hon any longer, is my reason for offering it
for sale. Terms will be made:. accommodating, and
possession given at any time. Parties desiring any
further information can obtain it by addressing me at
Princeton, N. J., or by. calling upon me at Princeton
Basin .. A.V. MARTIN.
Princeton, June 10, 'I3T 24-
TO LIR T ....The MANCHESTER COAL COMPA.-
NY.S COLLIERY at Warleaville, new. In good
condition. Apply to P. W. SHEA.PER, •
• Engineer of ltUnes.
Pottsville, March 48 . 18 M . • 12-tf •
Volt BENT.—An office comer - of Centre
and Market streets: also, one on Market
street, four doors from Centre. • Both light and •
convenient. Apply to LEWIS C. THO'BON CO:
'" Feb. 23, -
OR ALE.—The Brick Church on . Mar.
.1: ket street. Posamion given April lat, 186 T.
For tennis, apply to
Feb. 93,'61- 8. LEWIS C. THOMPSON & CO.
.
TO LET.—The °Mee now occupied by Harris
Bros: In Russets' Office Building. 2d door. Poe
session even April Tht. Apply to
HENRY O. RIISSEL; 2d and Mahantonge Etta. -
' Feb 23, '67 8-tf
In the Spring Months the srtem naturally
undergoes ft change, and HatX;OLD'a HIGHILY Coaona . •
maven Bxraacrr or Saasaraanar is an eaeistant of
the greatest value. . June 8. 17-21343ra
NEW STEAM MUNE MACHINE,
JACOB IULDIEB, Butcher,
No. 801 Centre Street,
.POTTBITILLE,
COrroarre TON OLD Town HALI,I - •
•. r "
'Returns thanks to his numerons customers for their lib
eral patronage in the past, and solicita a continuance
of the same. •
He ham enlarged his operations by the Introduction
into his business of a new steam sausage machine.—
lie will continue to keep on hand the best quality of
'Meat, Ham. Sausages., .t.c.
As his facilities for making' .sansage are much in
creased by the use of the steam machine, he is pre.
pared to make sausage to order, promptly and expo.
.
To dealers who purchase sausage s by wuolesale, a
liberal discount will be made,
Pottsville, July 27, 17
BR;I. HT & ..0 0.,
A 01113175 701
FAIRBANK"S SCALES.
Or ALL MECREPTIONS.
Ott Nand at Manufacturers Prieto.
Walgast 8, '6T
GEORGE W. SLATER,
teal Estaie Agt. and Conveyancer.
OEFIICE—Tewst Nall Building, 2d Starr,
POTTSVILLE, PA.
Homes, Lots, Lands, d c., bought, sold and rented.
Attention paid to the Interests of Landowners. Deeds,
Bonds, Mortittr Aztinlee obagraement, dm, written.
Nay 11. .
TWIT, PirIBLIEIMiIY—BESISESIEWS
ef STEEL PROCEB9.—A Pamphlet on the
Manufacture of Malleable Cut Steel, ite progress and
employment, b,y Remy Bessemer, with Illustrations of
machinery need. Price 25 cents. Sent on receipt of
16 mate by sell free. For sale by
BARRAN &RAMBRt Pothree.
SANE THE OLD'PA.1 0 1CB.
3 Ceuta anotind pea for clean White Writinir and
=Paper—and also Old Newspapers, Pamphlets,
Boobs with the coven taken off. Colored Pa:
per 1. Cent a wand. - BARMAN & RAMSEY.
PR.n►s SUPERB CllO2lO/ . ;
Equal to Oil Paintings,
• Consfeth3g of. the Group of Quills, Little Chickens,
DucklWe Victory Winter Crowned Wren, Ruby
Wren, Piper and N aat Crackers, the Awakening.
Real Gems of Art. Call and see them at
RAMAN & RAMERTS Boobstore.
U. S. STAMPS, Dr3,d Appie.,
WIC LI IntrL. i 1 I is
1 wm. UT
,
LEGLL, • • - • Rye, V Ins. $1 40 $1 501140, ll doz. l lB 15 ,
COMMERCIAL, and: Corty' l2O 180 Butter. _Va.. 21 25
- oats, • " 90 95 Cheese,
• ',
BUSINESS sonomns.. luso 800 Lard• e . 16 la
pew • " it 50 400 HMS, a 29 14
At BANYAN & 114.2111111,1012 Beaustere: Ity ,ah oD . " 1 55 1 6 51 sh m ad ers ;
~ ~:. s o
Cons Reid " 125 I,4ollle:ril f i t l o nd g!...
~, I LI 14 .
p ng24 :: 808
170 Hatton; " 16
Hay, V ton. 15 00 20 00 Pork, " 20 Sts
" bale cwt. 16 0 175 Veal, " IEI • ilf
P Straw laster, ", V ton, :1 BO ,1 60
Sugar Sugar, Cuba,
use, " . •
- Ho 12
Salt, V Bark. 276 850 Port') Rico, " 14
TSM
11
Seed, 1* White, -.
Clover " " • Crushed, . 119 .
Ilex ". . " - N. O. SraP. " so
ariII.PIIANIP COURT 8 Atilii—Ponmant to
6../ an order of • the Orphans' Court of the Comity of
Schuylkill, in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the
subscribers, Administrators of the estate of John Reed.
late of the Borough of Pottsville. In the County of
Schuylkill, deceased, will - expose to sale, by public
vendne, on
8918198419 Y. August 24 4 11367 -
•
at To'clock in the afternoon, at .the Tinton Rotel, in
the Borough of Pottsville :—All that certain three-15to
n brick dwelling house and lot of ground, situate hi
the Norwegian addition to the Borough of Pottsville
:aforesaid, on the northwardly side of Railroad street,
bounded and described as follows : Beginning at
• a post, a corner of lot marked No. 176, thence
by it north 11 degrees 86 minutes, west 830
to a post at the sceithwardly side of a 80 feet wide
street: thence along it. south 78 degrees and 86 ado
nisi, west 66 feet to a post • thence by lot No. 178
south 11 degrees and ad nannies. east 980 feet to Rail
road street aforesaid i thence along it north' 78 degrees
and 86 minutes, west 88 feet to the place of beginning,
being lot No. 177: late the estate of. said deceased.
Terms and ccinditions made known at the time and
place of sale by -
• DA C NIKL BR
ELEB REE IM,
UD, .
By order of the Orphans. Court, •
Avast 8, .43T 31-31 Caen= YoOsic Clerk.
PATRICK COMEFORD,
- C) 1:s. Ws 146
And Dealer In sorts of CEDAR AND MODEM
WAMI,
196 Centre Street, Pottsville.
Imager of s new mid economical WINE S 7
also of the new and ingenious aphid , motion CHURN
WOrders rapectrolly solicited.
- July 18, '67
THEODORE TcT;RIN,
ABA Wholesale and Retail Denby in
OLT, WALNUT' It ROTTWOODIMILIILIO!,
. Mii•kturalasis:aind*eture
. • asmis Bz. Parrs rzz „.3
me soma umonowoes maim! noa. 2D limos:
prilepething al Reeding demo st the' shoitastWate.
Timm who Waive 18ri1U.ac a Cos.
loxima autt4; sad meth the bloW, whir.l3
arm= ot l gisaizAkt
• 4 0 •11 AIR lidaboltro , p r a tier
leff
rootado.
TILE LATEST NEWS,
Saturday, August 17, 1867.
Aflipal Gus—Negre Equality Rights
League—NLiscelfaay.
' The Columbus (Ohio) Journal has the fol.
lowing : •
Union men throughout the State
should take courage from the glorious result
of yesterday's election in this city and Mont
gomery township. In a city and in a town- ,
ship where, last October, the Democratic
ticket' received nearly .1,206 majority, Mr.
Lehrer, the nominee for Justice of the Peace
of the Democratic party, or as is now called
by the honest Germans, the "Democratic -
now-Nothing Clique," was elected by only
89 majority."
The Pennsylvania Negro Equal Rights -
League held two harmonious and enthuslaarg
sessions In Reading on Wednesday. There
was a very full attendance, and several
speeches were delivered, expressing joy at -
the progress made by the.Leagne in its etittJ
cations' efforts, and promising that the day -
was not, far distant when the negroea would
vote in Pennsylvania. In the afternoon, a
series of resolutions were passed, thanking
the Lepel' lature for the bill granting ntwoes
the right to ride in . public conveyances ;
thankin t f ug, C r ongress for its protection; con
gatula the. country on the Republican
victory in ennessee; counseling the negroes
of the South to stand by the Republicans,
-who are the only hope here and there and ap- -
pointing a committee to visit Congress and
press the extension of the Franchise bill to
every State in the - Union. A letter from an
Irish Attorney in Schuylkill County was read,
promising his hearty support of the efforts for
negro suffrete . in Pennsylvania.
The Superintendent of.lndian Affairs in
Arizona reports (July 5) that there-has been
no change in the relations of the peaceful
Indiana on the Colorado. Nearly all the
bands of the river tribes are assembled at the
reservation, awaiting the fall of the river to .
commence farming. The river has been un
usually high this year. The Huttapais, a
mountainous tribe, belonging to the Colora
do district, are , hi fierce hostility With the
citizenshnd peaceful bands. -
Joseph H. Bradley, one of Surratt's coun
sel, was arrested on Thursday, on the oath
of the Superintendent of Police of Washing-.
ton, D. C., on the charge of having challeng
ed Judge Fisher. He waived a hearing. and
and entered bail to appear at Court. He de
nies that-his letter *as a challenge, and says
that it was only intended to have a meeting
foran amincable settlement of the differences_
with Judge Fisher.
Niagara Falls, Aug. .14.—Four men were
carried over Niagara a - Falls at a late hour last
evening. They were-two ferrymen and two
passengers. Their names are not yet known.
There is much 'excitement over the terrible
accident: Their bodies have not yet been
found, though search is being_ made in the
river below the Falls.
Italy is again visited by the cholera. Our
latest steamer dispatches stated that it had
made great ravages in Sicily, and according
to a cable dispatch dated Wednesday, it still
continues to spread. - -
In the late Indian fight, near Fort. Phil.
Kearney, sixty Indians and Lieuteoarit Jessup
-end five United States soldiers were killed.
The amount of gold in the United States
Treasury on Thursday, was $108,882,000, of
which $20,105,000 were in gold certificates.
The amount of currency was $67,281,000.
Registration in Alabama, as ar as beard
from, stands, whites, 59,054 ; blacks, 76,64.0.
Total, 189,685. •
The new patents.to be issued on Thursday
- next will number 226.
The report that Gen. Steedman is to be ap
pointed Secretary of War is again credited in
Washington, -
The older fOr the removal of Sheridan is
expected hotirly in Washington.
The stock market war very dull in Phila
delphia on-Wednesday, but prices were rath
er firmer. In flour there was -very little do
ing. Wheat, rye, corn and oats were un
changed,
A PowznrtL —There is a new patent
Sewing Machine, (called the Star Shuttle,) mann.
factored in Cleveland, Ohio, by W. G. Wilson &
Co., and sold for Twenty Dollars, that makes the .
Look Stitch similar to Wheeler Wilson, and
other first class machines. The manufacturers
olaim that it is equal in size, finish and workman..
ship, to any other first class machine, besides be
ing able to do the same range of work.
THE Hort. JAMES ARMSTRONG died on Mon
day evening, at Williamsport, aged 75 years,
after along illness. He was one of the moat
distinguished members of the bar in this - part
of Pennsylvania,' and had not missed_a court
in Lycoming county for the past forty years.
He was highly esteemed for his moral worth,
and was beneficial to many commencing bus
iness life. He was a full member of the Pres
byterian Church, and gave liberally to its sup
port. 'The deceased was father-in-law of the
Hon. James H. Campbell of this Borough:
* THE WASHINGTON CORRESPONDENT of the
Boston Daily Advertiser telegraphs , thus :
"The reason for the Copperhead attempt to
secure the removal of Judge bolt has tran
spired. There are sworn records in , his of
fice that clearly implicate leading New York
Democrats, several ex-rebel officials, and of
ficials and politicians in this city, in a plot to
utterly break down the Bureau of Military
Justice, and threw universal distrust upon Its .
record. They will be fully exposed to the
country in a few days, and will not only neu
tralize the late papers - from the. Attprney-
General's office, but will place their authors
in most unenviable positions.
Bay. HENRY Warnr, an ordained minister of
the German Lutheran Church. and recently 9n
perintendent of the German Lutheran Homo at
Germantown, had been held to bail in the anin,of
15000 in Philadelphia, to answer the charge of im
proper conduct towards girls, inmates of the
Home. The principal wrineases ais to his conduct,
are. Wilhelmina Lockhardt, aged 14 years, and
Mary Beahl, aged 13 years. The latter testified •
that about eight months ago defendant seized her
while passing through his office, and told her
that he loved her dearly, He then caressed and
kissed her; finally he placed hie hand on her body.
On the following day he violated her person,, and
up to the time of his resignation, about two eeks
since, he continued to take improper liberties with
her. • The accused is about 45 years, old, a Ger
man by birth, highly educated, and speaking
.fluently five different languages: He stood high
in his profession. Ho has a wife and six ohildrer.
(lief= OIICIANS.-151amon,& Hamlin have gain
ed a great reputation for the excellence and dura
bility of their workmanship, and trey allow no
instrument to go . out of their factory which,
through any defect, would be likely to injure the
"good report" of them which now everywhere pre
vails. They take equal Osiris with their small and
their large organs. All of them aro warranted,
and are perfectly reliable. The variety and beau
ty of the effects which can bo produced with some
of the large instruments are truly surprising; and
cap be properly understood and appreciated only
14 such intelligent persons as have heard these
organs fully and effectually displayed.—Provi
r.
deuce Journal. .
"The perfumed light
Steals through the mist of alabaster lamps,
And every air is heavy with the breath
Of orange flowers that-bloom- • •
I' the midst of roses."
Such was the flowery landlilled. with healing
sire and life-preserving products, where Dr. Drake
discovered the chief ingredient of his wonderful.
Tonto Medicine—PTA:fax - ma Brnzaa r -the eh
chanted tropical island of St. Croix. The PLAN-
T/aim Brrraas, combining all the medicinal and
tonic - virtues of the healing and life sustaining
products of that favored clime, are, without doubt,
the World's Great Remedy for Dyspepsia, Low
Spirits, and all other Stomachic difficulties-.
,MACINOLIA WATEII.-A delightful toilet article—
superior to Cologne and at half the price.
POTTSVILLE MA RITETS.
•
Corrected Weekly for the 111 'mere Journal
Wheat Floor; extra family, per barrel...
do ~ do do do per cwt
do . do extra per barrel...,
do do 'superfine, do
Bye Flour, do
do per cwt
Buckwheat Flour, do
Wbeat, prime white per bushel.,
do do red. do
Dried Peaches, pared, pe pound...
do ILDDIMO 130
dO
Lased flat Ran Road Iron, 1342 X and
2xM for ale cheap, BRIGHT & CO.
MAY 25, '67 21-
Qawing. Pitch, Tar, Paints; Splices, and boat.tmlid.
es. materials and tools generally at lowest man
ufacturer's prices: at Buforr co!s..
June 8„ 'Br
ICMICIE DIANIIFACTORY.--The
nnder
atgned bare entered into Capartnerthip for the
=of nuunifactnririg Beek, and are premodta
I with a good article in • large or man
Quantities to ea It purchasers. Being striated on the
Mine Bill Railroad we are prepared to ship to any
JOHN . & REMY RICE„
July :18-9S-2m SucCeasort to Banana Amen..
vereter Coolers, beautiful and durable, all slue.
TT 23. at FRIGHT & CO'S, Pottsville...
GEO. W. CROSLAND,
Late of 144,..M0ut1a Stk Mt., Philadelphia,
Rae opened a new Grocery Store. with a choice lot of
Coffee, Tea, Saw, Flour, Molaseea. White Honey.
Thitter,Peeesi, Fruits, Hams, Mackerel, Oil. Salt;
'Vinegar, Brows, &c, Om., at, ISO Coke illtreet,Yotts
illle.
N. B.—Seven seta of new Government learn liar
tem tortilla. July 2T, 411-30-4t4
JOHN BIN . DEE Y,,
TAX COLLUCTOB, -
WM collect claims of all ldnda with promptitude, and
at reasonable dame&
Can be seen at the Union Hotel on Wedr.esday and
BatuV evenings of each week,: from 6to o •
'cieek 4
J11..67 80.2m
GEORGE BERNET,
:lIPHOSTEREM, •
market Street, between 6ee.ad dk TkWs
Would te n to the public that he has taken the
store room stoinZer I n Wel.Axusturs okt
=nen en
%CS ITLU ernerpes
let
215 50
6 75
11.95
7 50
860
4 25
4 60
9.61
91 40
$1350
6 25
10 56
6 20
7 75
3 75
4 00
9 401
9 BO