The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, August 31, 1867, Image 3

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POTTSVILLE, PA.
r.arrsDAV; AUGUST 31, 1867.
Tid.ON . STATE TICKET.
FOR SUPREME JUDGE.
gon, HENRY W. WILLIAMS of Pittsburgh:
t - NION COUNTY TICKET.
Judge of New.Cirisuinal Onset,
DAVID B. GREEN, of Pottsville..
- Associate Judge,
!Ps. CHARLES W. P1T3L4,.2i, of Pottsville.
Atots legate, . •
cw-rtis JAMES IL CLEAVER, of •Aahland.
Assembly,
coNRAD F. SHDIDEL, of Tap:mons,
•
61:1IFITH T. JUNES, of Si. Clair,
IN - ILIA:1g J. LEWIS, of Tremont. .•
Sheriff, •
6 tr. GEO_ C. WYNKOOP,(if Pottsville
•Conatinifisioner,
t;EoRGE. K. MOYER, of .Weet Brinewick.
Director of the Poor,
REUBEN HOY, of North Itianheitn
- Auditor;.
ELI
ELI THOI.IPSON, of East Norwegian.
Jury Commissioner,
JEREbMR - REED, of' PotthvWe
Independent Candidate for County
' Treasurer, ,
CONRAD HE.LTZEIt; of Norwegian.
NOT A OANDIDATE.-It having beep rumored that
Colonel DANIEL. NAGLE or this Borough, is an in
dependent candidate for Treasurer, we are au
thorized to state that such is not the case. He
will not be a
.candidate at the apProaching else
1:013 for that or any other office. . •
JUDGE SHARSW.OOD ON LEGAL
::-TENDERS.
Et tract from .Efia Opinion an the Case of
• ' Bode Yyr. TrOtt..
• •
. • -
"On the 'whole, then, I am of opinion that , the
provision of the act of Congress ofFebrnary 25th,
declaring the notes issued in pursuance of .
that act to healawful money, and.a legal tender,
t Sr,*;S"TrITTIONA.L.
"Ttlitl renders it unecessary that I should-con
t.liter the other question which has been made, as
1.) the effect of the special agreement to pa in
lawful, silver money of the United States. I am
1.1 favor of entering judgment for the plaintiff,
i.et. as the majority of the court are of a different
opiLion, judgement for the defendant."---Wied
the Philadelphia Age of 23d of February,
1' 4 ;4. ,ihere the opinion is published to full.
ft nay also be found in the Legal. Intelligence:"
of larch 18,.1864, page 92. • -
to the same copy of the Age is a carefully pre
pAr:.l 'eulogy of the judge and this opinion, in
n t,,..11 is the following : • " '
",in age Snenewoon reasons upon and decides
the etBe, as if he'were some spirit 'sitting far
above and out of the contentions.and strifes of
t i v . world:"
Will not the holders of greenbacks and Govern
tn,nt bonds consider the judge as quite too ele-
Vat f a and ether's' for such earthly honors as a seat
on the Supreme Bench ? . .
FOR, A CONVENTION
TO AMEND THE STATE CONST/T u•rION
iVe .ntik the above Banner, and Intend fighting It
.11 on Atil
We propose in the Constitution; Increasing the num
,Ttepresentatiyes to 400. and Senators.loo, limit
ine the session to 40 days with pay at $6 a day.' The.
lltpre-entatives to be elected from single districts
t re , whout the State.
Itsss'a general law for all corporations beyor4..tim
a , b of individual enterprise.. and no Special Laws.
All corporations with an income not exceeiling4 - 21i;-
alit. In he granted by the courts.
n.r the balance of the busineas of the State; 40. and
in fact, 00 days, would be sufficient for all the legisla
tion the people require.. This is the only plan to break,
at, the present corrupt system, because large bodies in
ellft,rt sessions are not so liable to be corrupted.
NE:W rORK..—JA.3IE.S R. WATTS, Room
N.. 1, 167 Broadway, Parudeyßuildingi, Neiv York
ci(y, is authorized to receive anbscriptions for tho
Mraais' JoraNab and also to collect bills for the
DAILOW'S NEW MAP
OF 'THE
ANTHRACITE COAL REGIONS:,
This Map is the latest published of the Anthracite
Coal 'legions of Pennsylvania. It differs in many re
spects from other Maps published, because it gives the
l'Ormatinn and. also a representation of-the Coal Ba
sin., together with the location of all the collieries in
tile Anthracit6 Coal Regions„&e,,
Price on "Milers._
Is case for Pocket.
MEMO
MO=M
Do. on'Muslin dissected
_ .
Thoeejn Pocket form will. be sent free by mail on
receipt of the above prices: For sale - at . •
I.I.A.NNAN:SI:Sookstore, Pottavil;e.
SHEAFER'S MAP
OF THE . COAL. REGIONS
In cases, $1 INC: In sheets,' sl.* 00, and on rollers,
$2 51. 'Also stivenfres Coal .and Iron Itiop
of ll'ennsilynnin—fn sheets $1 Od aiid in cases
$1 21.. For sale at BANNAN & RAJIiSEPS
Book and'Stationery Store, Pottsville. •
MEMORIAL
PATAIOTISII OF .suiryLtlLL COIJATT
1. • Great Redaction in Price.
THE LAST CHANCE. TO GET THE BOON.
In order that all who desire to preserve this
Record of the Patriotism of Schuylkill County
during the Rebellion, may not be debarred by the
price from purchasing, We have reduced the price
as follows for the remainder of the edition:
In cloth, ' reduced from $2 50 to $1 50.
• " aheep, (library) " " 275 " 175
" half.morocco • " " 3 25.`. 225
morocco gilt " " 375 " 275
A KENT . UCKY rebel paper says' of Andrew.
Johnson .!‘ he is an eminent tailor, but a con
temptible President. • :
JUDGE LUDLOW of Philadelphia, has been
nominated by a - convention irrespective
,o
party, for re•clection , as Judge of the-Court of
Common Pleas.
TOE .President fearing the effect of Sheri : _
tians reception in the North, has ordered that
be proceed from New- Orleatts to his -new
command in the West: ,
THE Boston. Advertiser says of•the Grant
correspondence :. "Careful inquiry concern
ing the same, leaves scarcely any doubt but
that the President furnished it for publication,
while in .a condition similar to that in which
he was when he took the oath of office. "
uos. Lis BARTIIOLOMEW presided very ac
ceptably, over the ..deliberations of the late
Onion Convention. • He exhibited great ca
pacity in•parliamentary tactics, was prompt,
impartial and affable. Mr. - Bartholomew is
besides, one of the most effective public
speakers in the State. • - .
" THE AM:RICAN UNION" is the title of a
staunch and spirited weekly paper published
in Griffin, Ga., by J. Clarke Swayze, Esq.
The Union "pitchei into . "' the stay at-home
rebels with vlm,.and advocates Equalßights,
Juctice, and •_Reconstruction on the proper
basis, with ability - and earnestness.. Long
may the American Union live andlnosper.
As the Democratic papers of this State have
exhibited a penchant lately for copying arti
cles from the New York ,Trlbune,, and- en
dorsing Mr. Greeley's views, we direct their
attention to one in another column, headed,
"The President, • "and -suggest-that its publi
cation by them might enlighten their readers
iu regard to the real character and intentions
of King Andy I. •
•
ANDT's party is d..7.Py getting sthaller and
beautifully less. ,Even the Democrats are do
serting him. In York County, the home of
Jere. Black, who expects to be called to
Johnson's Cabinet, a Democratic Convention
was held the other • daylin which . Andy's
name was not even mentioned, while the
DemOcratic County Convention of Allegheny,
which met in Pittsburg a" few days since, re-:
fused to pass a resolution which was offered
endorsing
. the administration of Johnstb.
IMPEACHMENT OF ANDREW SOHNSON.—Since
the recent transactions of the President in re
moving officers who are diterinined to carry
out the Reconstruction law, and his efforts to
implicate members of Congress in certain
dishonorable acts, the feeling in favor of his
impeachment has been greatly strengthened.
Letters from prominent Republican members,
some of whom were previously opposed to
any such action, now say that impeachment
is the only remedy for the persistent efforts of
the President to obstruct and• nullify, the
laws: The mass orthe Republican'patty has
for months been in SdVance of Congress On
this question, and they , expect their represen
tatives to act decisively in this matter at the
approaehing session.' It is an. Imperative ne
cessity for the gqod of the ccr . antry, and the
Republican representative who refuses to
_act, should 13- held to a strict accountability
by his constit ency. • • .
THZ YyJacs Gears Caers.+They promise .
neat abundairice the world over. • The yield
in this coney as is • knOwi3, is lerge.,`,The .
London Mercantile Gazette surveys the veri:.
mg grain aintries' Of triropti,'to - ascert*
the prospects of 04=4 supplies. , in-Eng
land all looks well, „and no defideocY: lB :; B P -
Prehended. In Paris the stock of floor is the
largest ever held, amounting to- eight hun
dred thousand cwts. - Considerable
mews are making to England direct from
Prance, but the United Kingdom
.is MalldY
dependent on the Black gea rodeo :.1324411t ,
harvest in the Booth of Russia 'laving been
very abundant the exports frOtti - thatgnaiter
are expected to reach two million quarters.
_The conclusion is that smithy la ont•of the
question, and the prospect favors Chift opinion
that the grain crops of Europe, W111.1:41.11L'Ire,
than mushy abundant , and that optical Int/
rola low.
LUTTER-FROW-BPUR;
The. Rise of the City—The Illiiitsyry.ggirit
of Prassic—The King - and lifenkturch—,
Theiii Visit iolpakis and Planolleon—MoN
Magnifigent Stews, "pater dei Lin-
den”.—The National ILibiar, the Diane.
nine and the VdiTeriiii-,-.A.lexaddar von
1311enn.'
meat--The "Orpinaea 3 P—Tlie Zeologiciii
and 'Botanical Gardens ast .the River
spree . -A Reaatillai . Ferrol..
CoansPoipinecri op. JqtritalLi.j
.
• Bemmi,Auguet . 4th, ISGT. - .1
City of the Prussians, thy Mar is Mthe aieendant !
From the Small hemlet which fishermen founded In the
thirteenth century on the sandy shores of the Spree: . fa
stream scarcely to be dignified with the name of river,)
and.which prior to the, advent cif King Frederick the
First, still remained a town of very ordinati preten
tionsßerlin has at length risen into d grofikt and nape-
one metropolis, and le the head and centre ()is power-
fol nation: Whilst lam testi:dinone of the milereells.
of this great holleycorrb of houses, /bore the nb* of
the Alm, the labor, the .eonfnalcm and the harrying to
and fro of the bees and drones that constitnte. Its mo-
Lion and machinery and hear the rattle of Can
oonry, which but for its regular PerbfaileitY, might be.
easily mistaken for distant thunder. It is-occaaloried
by the artillerymen, Whin - elx- miles beyond i , the..eity
limits, are Practicing with.eume new invention, more
terrible antldestractive and :death -dealing than , any of
As predecessors. For while rill the nation Sof Europe
are busied with the imitative , labor ot. recoustnicting
their musketry to the character of that which last year
taught-them Fuchs bitter Lesson, Prowls is quietly oo;
copying herself with aortae still more effective meatus
for thrashing in aloture conflict, any ration leasedzi;
Wed and cringing *nine the yoke of bigOtry. than
herself. The military spirit of 'Pp:wide Ls something
entirely nnetivaled in the annals of nations. 7rcen the
highest prince of the realm to the lowliest peasants
sop, every . one tti.st.does.init, suffer fie= oi
melformation, mnst devote a portlcroibf. hie Mt° the
service-of & countrx)n the army. There ieno Intying
Of forme money. no !vying of 'eutietltuteP, no Sams.
from the medical examiner; (this is Ink put in by way
of roandink Off the senbanim.) no getting out of lhe
scrape whatever; :but every man. when he attain that
°stage of life'. which Shakspeare and.the laws
dedicate to the "soldier," though he need not be "fall of
round oaths... and `•look - into the griai cannon's jaws,'"
most shoulder aims and march. Though the nation
has for its King la handsome -Irak respectable :looking
elderly gentleman, who liar_ probably quite as good a
head as heads run in the general crop of ihe buittan -
family (I beg the human family's . pardon, I mean of
repel heads); yet the King's king is NW:Merck, Who Is
besides, the genius of the nation:Mld the ruling politi
cian of Europe', and who; does not practice Tallyrand's
theory of ”using words.to conceal hie thoughts."
scarcely ever leaves, the society of the 'nig, least of all
on Important occatilons. After the Luxemburg ques
tion was battled, and there was a'reaction or sufficient.
royal friendship' (a peculiar species) that the Bing could
visit:Paris and be the guest. of Napoleon, like all the
other kings and prinOes, Nisrasick wan , very careful to
accompany him ; and when at puling, Napoleon cen
descended to shake , bands . with - the wary minister—
which astonished all the editors of .Fraticeit' . *Eu3 a
recognition of an intellectual piesence not inferior to
h!e For; some time paid the 8113g:has been et
'Env, a watering place, and has.recently, gone to Wiee,
baden, where the Count Joined hip, ostensibly for the
ptirpose of tonferring.witb lelm on matters of doieestic
import, but In all probability, for the purpose of keep;
ing him under his. °wrap:kWh:kg observation, - and
froin the conandsalon.of any social or political indiscre
tion ; for he advocates the. total abolishment of -all
. . .
these gambling concerns, whereas the King heretofore
generally encouraged theit, and has been known 'on
occasions when the "rouge et - noir' , banks:at Wiesba
,dertitud. Homburg were "swamped," to replenish the
loss from hia own funds. Like - he has had thus far in
all other things, BisMarck will have his way in thiS,.
and the dim of public gambling on Pramian territory
to•e .- alre4dynombered.. . •
The bright side of •Berlin is undoubtedly, on the
street called:"Hnter den Linden," that runs from the
Brandenburger gate to the royal castle. One may not
easily find elsewhere on an equal area of ground, so:
many. and such magnificent buildings - as here. Cora ,
mencing at that grand castle, ecconyl only to the Tuil
eries at Paris, we cross over the bridge that Is adorned,
on both sides with eight groups of marble (Ivrea more
than life-sized,-reprettenting tableaux in warfare: -Vic
toria teaching the youth in heroic lore, Minerva in-,
strutting the young warrior in the use of aims, Pallas
handing him kis weapons, Victoria crowning the war
rior; Vittoria raising . the wounded hero, Pallas challen
ging him to renewed conflict, Pallas Sheltering and pro
tecting him in battle, Iris leading the wounded victor
to Olympus. - 'Such are these groups, that stand out
like great white cardinal letters in the war alphabet of
the rising generation of Prussia.
We' next pass the tivo splendid museums, and in suc
cession the arsenal, the royal guard-horse, the univer
sity, the Academie on the One side, and -on the other
the palace of the Crown Prince, the opera house, the
Hedwige-church, the library, and the King's residence,
that may all be seen from one point of observation;
whilst the gendarme-market, two large churchei with
: magnificent cupolas, the large theatre,, and an array of
fine residences are in the immediatevleinity. 'The fa
- cue to which the rays of Berlin life converge is Unter
den. Linden, intim neighborhood of !he Opera houtie..:-
Here the people walk about in -their church garments,
and the 'hop windows offer their temptatlons to the
Penns by, even as on Centre, street' in. Pottsville,
the boulevards in Paris.• •
, •
The 'library is one of the characteristic institutions Of
this nation. It contains nearly seven' hundred thou
sand.volumes, on all subjects of selence, art, history
.and literature, and is:accessible to 'all, free of charge's.
The large readingroom Is open from nine o'clock in
the morning until fonr in the afternoon; or the readers •
may takehoeks to their own homes by paying a nomi
nal sum of about ten cents a year. - Here too, are many
relics of curious interest to the visitors; among which is
one of the first seven Latin bibles printed by Guten
berg In 14fie ; Some ;of Luther's translation in manu
script, and the Hebrew bible which he used in this'
work ; manuscript writings of Virgil, and other ancient
poets, and of Goethe, .(whose entire - Faust is here, in
mannecript,) Schiller, Humboldt, and Many other 'mod
ern classics. Mariy specimens of the Koran are filet;
exhibited, and some beautiful printing in Chineee on - .
silk ; also, very ancient. writing in Greek, more tinin
two
,thousand years old, on parchment, leather, Palm.
leavac papyrus, bark and atones. Here also, as a sci
entific relic, are contained the two bronze hemispieiess
upoll which Otto von Guerlke made:some of his first
experiments with an exhausting air pump;-who, when
accused as being leagued with the Evil One, demon
strated to his sovereign his discoiery by adjusting the
well-fitting edges of these hemispheres In cohesive uni
on, then having exhausted the air ftom the -Interior of
the globe, hitched eight mutes. to each 'of the hemi
spheres, but they could not 'be palled aeundet, and
thus it Was that he disproved • hie collision with the
devil. If every inventor of the present da' had tone.
quit himselfie a similar manner of this relationship,
what a demand for mules there would be !
Remarkable for the many objects of interest which
they enclose, are the two tenseness of this city. They
contain an extensive collection of antiquarian curiosi
ties ; several Series of mythological frescoes, that fail
not to refreshen one's Interest in the poetic lore of the
Rode and goddesses of old
. ; gallexiee of paintings and
settlptury, both of which contain gems of the highest
order—among the - latter especially, are a Venus de
Medicla and Hebe by Canova, the two finest creations •
from stone that I have Peen, excepting, loveliest of all;
inspiratiOn of art which is in the Roman baths at
Potsdanithe Ilebeend Ganymede by Ithntechel. You
"gaze upon these with ardor, with wrapt enthusiasm,
and hold 'your breath for fear you might disturb them;
you feel miff It 'were a - desecration of the Divine power
to niake such things as these front out the cold materi
al of Marble. It Is Impossible la the limited space of a
letter, to enumerate anything more In detail of these In
teresting museums, and we must pus on. • ' •
The university, attended by an aggregate number of
'two thonsand students of divinity, law, philosophy and
medicine, is a temple'dedicated to science that ietruly
worthy of its exalted purpose, l'or nO edifice of man's
creation should be more beautiful
.and
. imposing than
that wherein is educated and developed the intellect of
our youth, the Divine spark by which only we resemble
the Creator.,
- An object of interest to all admirers of great minds
.must ever.be the hoase wherein Alexander von Hum
boldt dwelt during the, latter seventeen years of his'
life. In - mittens/11 knowledge, as far tut it is permitted
Our finite understandings to comprehend things in the
heavens. upon the earth and in the earth, Humboldt
certainly.was the meat learned man that eVerliVed. In
the librarfl have seen the entire collection of worke,
that-be - halt written on all scientific subjects, in Latin,
Gorman and French—for he wrote with ego] readiness
in either langnagemid„ It is almost Ind - el:1161e that one
mind should grasp, and one mans life-time suffice fcir
the *hide of that stupendone work..- Yet:nature dealt
kindly with him, and his physical Organization, under
the healthful influence of his peaceful, temperate and
philosophical soul, was . permitted to preserve its har
, monions movement unto a ripe old. age ; when no
taint of disorganized flesh destroyed him, brit - .having
.finished all hie labor% he went to.eleepi in his chair one
day, and quietly breathed his lest
Among the many monumental statues that embel
lish tinter den Linden, the most noteworthy is probe-.
bly that of the old hero of Waterloo,. Blucher; With
.drawn eaten and his left foot resting . on a cannon;
looks like a veteran, every loch of hins„ThePinieims
have a peculiar fondness for the :Memory of this chief
tain, and if. the truth were .mown, . which two names
in the history of their eomtry stand uppermost in putt
lie eetimation. it is quite probable that "der site Fritze"
(King Frederick lI i and ".der site Blucher," would
carry off the p . riee. And now let us' Perambulate' to
the other side of . Bann; and in the Old Jacobi 'street
we will enter an establishment that. is honorisd. with .
the titulary distinction' of Orpheum. Thiele a large -
'garden covered and enclosed with glass; Wlthiiitt are
alcoves and fountains, palm treets, banannas and other'
trouicna plants; scattered about among the foliage in'
artistic effectiveness and pendant in wreaths in all man
ses of devicee r ate four thousand gai:jets, enclosed by
.glass globes of different oilers, whilst from Oak:Mg
a band of the ablest musician's captivate the senses
with strains of dellelons sweetness Alasi this is :a
nursery for . exotics In more 'senses than one; fre,tieie;
the merrybledes and the cameliait tangle In the be- -
wildering 'dance denondnited "cancan," in which the
display of gaudy dresses, pretty, feet:and :great, bushy
'tow-colored ringlets is quite electrifying; and appe,
many , galvanized some -of the. old .weather-heated
hearts that I saw there, intoa momentaryeounn Of new
life again. Pass we now outside the en*, and follOse:
the serpentine toners of the-Aver Spres fa it skirts the'
northern boundary of "the Thienparten-walkaridApens
Wily:along, the dear old yloatsre to:. Some
of its convulsions, however, it has been widened and
deepen 4 into a species of beethe,- winireiti it 'is abets.
- ,lntely'people to tide yew/lett diet/those on light tits;
' • Tato'one elf thews' my Anatol& friend" seated I
thanKlitthoother days avowing with Itettilc,49,kli that,
he must have a little frolic in one of those dolphins,
and this; was the 'Bret and only Birribe Wile on al*
he leR his "own, his native land." We Writ° theleft.
and enter the Zoological garden, which leA,iirlitoaleis
- ark for the completeness of its selectkma from anitha
ted nature. An elephant flourishes heie who seems* ,
solemneet-.Patriarch of hie kind; end anew* w ith
distinckneighwhenever his keeper sake him a miestain.
Tyro grizzly Were, I dwell here that. would make:Beth'
El l3 # 2l . 4olr tk im P. in itgSfsei, , arid hi .
itch to exarehie the trigger hit that famous rifle of his.
In other reepatitatbe menagerie is very aihnifirie . tict
of Park We now bittect the itho - le of the woods called
the ThieraltagaVaid take A/00k thrOngh tLe.bgtanfaj.
:Mwhich iv one oftive most comeive 9f Ira triad
stsj 'lest 'e4ti tdibtalen ' 'hOt.
iiotll36l; faw6fch;-sad id the Onen,C;irdestanonlie warren
ittoissOtititiOnt kin& Of plants We cultivated. .
lath 'lei ni return'that , ' litiOutill**Avidte.cd the
'woOde to tlie "Oriat Btu," Plik‘ti
dui foitt4 dindri : la aromi dinctlph W.o iiiPO NW
,
which leads to theßrntiriabarger gate of the city; and.
walk leisurely toward it. /t 1e nbeatildral forest com
posed of oak, b id:, birth and limier' very.
thlehlY.planted, but without a particle cif underbnish,
sl32(i upon grow:a' sit level ,as a prairie, -It is just: the
place where you would expect to meet a poesle of wood:
- nymphs at 'almost every tarsi, and *here,' without in
the least iidartibur your nrrves, &lug Oberon, with the
little &voila= around his neck, mid the 'diver 7 1 *
In his hand, might descend through the foliage in his .
golden chariot drawn.* clever; and butterliteir, stretch
out his *and and dies& a castle of pearls, emeralds and
rubies for you. then disappear.
'l'he darkneas of night has come over the place, bet
It is intersected with numerous excellent roads,jon
'every one of which is a double row of lamps with burni
Mg gee jets, which spittle through the green vat:Mare
• of the trees, appear and disappear as - you - pass a10ug.. , ,
that it seems indeed like an. inchanto region wherein
you wonder: 0, loirely forest 1 if your leaves were all
toes and cans Ind tongues, ',what dories yokcotild - tell„
of &old confessions that are whisnered In your hear,
lug; of rapture 6 that thrill the chlldrrm of men under.
your aminost* Ishailotvl. what, i:,,tmde of. ethics ~you
could weave from the*Oof and web_of thougharthat
escape intoyoot trackless waste Let the stedentsig
- trots enter the 'llbrMical- Ot men;, flatter among the
leaves and read ; but let me, 0 bower 'of Nature, seek
refuge in your shady retreats, and ,think 1 Let me,.
panting, draw new life andlnspiration from the oxygen .
of your. expiring foliage I C. 11. H.
r Mom the NewTork:Tribrure Clear:gut 28th.1
' . THE PRESIDENT. _
The President mast stand and fight- We have been
advancing and retreating. long- enough.. Too many
white flags have been. exchanged. . The President
means war. War be it. thmi, and Godispeed the right t.
Nearly five months since, the regular session of Con.
greser was sejourned: The Winter' bad ,witnessed as
angry, contest With the President:.: There .were, three
-.. • 1. The Democratic fragment: which Th
gavee
=eat undivided alleelance. .2. The moderete Re
' publiama who, busting in his honor, endeavored to
make his duty so plain, and his responsibilities so ex
act and Umited, that•he totild not escape them, They
hoped that the nation might be . reconstructed without
vitdent appeals to the law. B. The earnest and extreme
Repnbliens who felt that we could not reconstractthe.
country without the impeachment of the, President.—
The counsels of the moderate Republicans prevailed
Theryearried the Reconstruction bill. 'With the aid of
one df these parties they prevented impeachment. This
was accomplished by the assurance that ,the President,
having protestethigainst the action of Congress, would
content himself to have the law qtrietlycarried Into ex
ecution. He appointed generale in command of the
Military. districts. who were most acceptable to the
country. In the case of Geri. Sheridan, at least, we
know. that some of these appointments' were made ,
- against his own judgment, andip deference to the wish - -
es of Congress. The Senate and House adjourned.—
It was felt that the virtual acguipecente of the Presi
dent would make an extra session unnecessary, Sam
mer would sr • the f3tateereconstrocted. Universal suf
. foto would he tested. The' States - would gradually ,
drift back into the Union. When Mr: McPherson
called the roll of the House in December. all the States
would answer, and once more a full American Congress
would sit in an American Capitol. • .
Then =tithe drat crime. 'Phis lair .of ,Rordnatino;'
Lion. dilly considered and - well-approved,-was- sinalied!
by Mr. Stanbery. We give Mr. htanbery the credit of,
being enable lawyer and upright man.. -
But the ?real
dent wanted an opinion that was pot upright, and, in
an evil hour his Attorney-General wrote it.
l
and subtle, the country did not fall to see that n =
'
fraud, and that the President, in Inviting its 'publica
tion, was dishonest.. It out the heart oat of the Milita
te bill. Reconstruction was brought to a dead lock.- , ‘
The opinion, to use the figure of Gen. Sheridan; was a
broad, macadamized road to, fraud and perjury, and the
Southern State! were 'thrown into chaos. Congress
was hurriedly assembled. A bill was passed which
even the subtlety of Mr. Stanbery could not TBIBCOII
- The extreme Republicaua contended that even
'this would - not do, and that to have R . econstructidn, the
President should be impeathed.. The counsels of such
men as Mr. Feseenden and Mr. Wilson, Mr. Colfax and
Sherman prevailed. It was held that with's, law thus
plainly en itten the President would' walk. directly. and
the South would be restored. This assurance, indeed,
wars given by men who claimed to speak' for the Presi
,dent Congress -believed it, Red again adjourned • over
until Winter,
-Now comes the second crime:. Stanbery Cannot ex
plain the law.. Blue. Is so palpatiy bine that there is
no milking even the President believe It to be ' gray.
'The President tiu the best part of a yew. bzfore, him.-_
Since he cannot nullify the law, he prosecutes its min
isters. Stanton is strickendown. The War Secretary,
who his been retained two years for his disagreeable -
qualities, is removed for his - virtues. Because of-the
only , guilty which the 'Republican Party 'honors la
• Stanton, he is disgraced.' Then cornea Sheridan. This
glorious soldier simply performs a -soldier's duly: He
executes the law in its tine spirit. He does the work.;
whiclithe country expectshim to do, and isAismtseed.'
A few days pea, and. Sickles Is removed for loyal , de
votion to Congress and the country, • A Tammany. _
Democrat is placed In New Orleans, while a soldier
without a record goes' to Charleston. •In 'a few days,
Pope will be ordered back to the Indian count] y; to as- •
shit. Sheridan in guarding. wailers Posts and baggage
trains. Grant has served the President's turn in re
moving Stanton, and his Excellent,' 'ls impatient al
ready, calling the General of our armies "A Radical spy
and traitor." He will no doubt speedily be asked to
retire •In' favor of Steedman or Black That Christian
' gentleman and soldier, Howard, who has shown in his
high place the philanthropy and piety of the great name
he bears, is written upon the slate of degradation.
Holt will follow—and with these men every soldier or
civilian who will not aid the President in his treason.
Where will this end ?. The President means war.
The•country mast stand and tight, orbs .defeated. We
believe anything , possible of Mr. Johnson. His admin
'istratkin lea record of deception, cunning, disloyalty—
antagonism to the best interests of the country. He
has made the Administration of Buchanan respectable
by showing a degradation to which even 111. , „ Buchanan
szonid not sink ' . Retail betrayed his party.: he has be
trayed his friends he has betrayed his country. Noth
ing is left: of his Administration but a few miserable
jobbers like those who hang. around. -him, and a few
wretched political Adventurers like Black- The man
who accept contumely for his cause, like Seward, and
Randall, and • Wells, he la impatient to drive bad his
Cabinet. The savage of Sahara is not insensible to the
obligations of friendship; but even this no longer_ re,
mains with Mr. Johnson. ' • .. •
We 'admonish the people to piepare for a Stern and
high responsibility. It is nearly a hundred days until
Congress meets. Till then we are powerless. We can
etrili , bow to this dreadful tyranny, The President ail=
ed to the country in his lest message. Weirdo, him
n the appeal. Let our friends organize everywhere.
Let us make the canvass upon theinfamy of Mr. John
son's Administration, and having defeated him at tte
ballot-box: we can prepare, through our representa
tives, to consider. the best course to be taken to punish
him-for, hia crimes , -against the. sovereign: will of the
American Nople. • . •
•
1010:64z)witel-V403 , :eg.:11 . 21.1z):0•:,.te1iti3:.
The Washington correspondent •of the New
York Tribune telegraphs: ' , • • •
• There is a good deal of lively-excitement in pc.• -
litical circles here. The Grant-and-Johnson car
respondence on:the removal of Sheridp, publish
ed here to-day, together with the rumors of. Cab
inet changes and farther change among the dis
trict commanders in; the south, are all being talk:
- ed about and commented on. The White House
is lively. with Democratia,peliticians. The hadi.
.call are very jubilant over Grant's letters. They
have been waiting with painful anxiety for him to '
show where he , stands, and now they feel relieved.
It has come to light to-day that the President
and Grant had bad almost an °peril - ante:re. The
lattpr's friends.assert that the President,• being
foiled in trying to use him,• is getting desperate..
In his order relieving Sheridan and assigning
Hancock to the Fifth Military District, be over
rules Grant, and orders Sheridan to proceed. di—
rectly from New Orleans to the Hams without
first visiting Washington. This the 'President
cites to his friends as a hit at Grant for his
pertinence, There areother mattere, also, on which,
Johnson and Grant cannot Agree. The President,
urged on by • his political' advisers, contemplates
many radical changes in the War Department.
Many of these do not meet the . approval of Grarit;
and the - President eteemailisposed to ignore Grant..
It is intimated that Grant will ask to be relieved
from duty at the War, Office soon.. -. Ae.indicated •
in this.correspondence of yesterday, this is but
the beginning of a plan 'to carry the next Weal
dential election by the 'Democracy. .Changes in
. the Cabinet will certainly take place. Seward's'
friends sayhe -will surely go: The old man has.
-been keeping very quiet lately, - and haiilittle to
say at the White House. .Randall expresses:to
his friends a willingness to resign.... . • .
He had a long interview with the Pipsident to
night.. Before hes,went to the Whit House; he
told his friends that on the interview would de
pend whether or not he: would resign; Should it
not have been .satisfactory to-night, Randall will
send in bieresignatlim to-morrow: War 4 H. Lai '
mon, slaw partner of terry . - Black, here, once ap t
pointed Marshal for the District of Columbia by .
President Lincoln, is being pushed for.the place
by . the Democracy represented' . by the
• The pressure -- on McCulloch has been considep-.
ably. checked. The 'feeling is:so strong against'-
his resignation, that his opponents have begun to
give him up-as, a hopeless _case:. Jerry Black ie
epoken of as Mr. Seward's Eirtcoessor. :Black is
great friend of Johnson'W. He still holds out the
idea that - Johnson has power to disperse Congress
should they insist on "overruling the.law," as he
calls it, and farther, that her will
: do it, if theryat. -
tempt impeachment, •
• This seems to he absurd, but is well known-by
those who kbow Black and .bis - followers, that
they believe "in this, and are trying to impress it
on the President: -. lmpeachment is being talked
of here.by. prominent Republicans'as the Only re.
'sort to head off the. President. .• •
"i7l - The yellow fever oontinuesits . raviges in
'Texas and Louisiana. • ; • • - ,
•Sa - The oil regions are becoming interested in
the temperance cause, Adversity has - done the
oil regions g00d........• ..• . • .
'air The discovery of a new - plauet by Professor
Watson of Ann Arbor, -.Michigan, on Saturday
night, is announced: • • • • •
air There is a joint stock beggars' company at
Paris, with a working Capital of sixteen thousand
dollars inlovernment securities. ' '
. sarGeneral Sheridan has ordered the remove , '
of the City Surveyor and the city Attorney. :and
• Assistant Attorney of New Orleans; He has also
decided that no person not re '"stared, according
to the. laws of Congress, shall be considered .a
dulyqualifled voter in Louisiana. ' •
Mgr General Cook has. defeated the Indialis in
Nebraska in several engagements.. Gbneral Au
gur thinks an Indian war would .be general Fide
all the • tribes, and that twenty thousand men
would be required to cur/ it on in his department,
and an equal number in General Hancock's,..
- -- •
A CLEtiov3mi writing to a friend, says: MY.
voyage to "Europe' is 'indefinitely postpono:
have discovered the 'fountain of health' on this
side - of the Atlantic. Three bottles of the Peru
vian Syrarrhave rescued me from the fangs of the
fiend Dyspepsia. :Dyspeptics should drink,from
this fohntam. . •
Tun Komi' & HAM.mx Cienter OBoati.,-The
tones of this instrument are mellifluously sweet,
with a volume, power and expreesion truly mar
vellous, in so small and compact an organ: They
are beautiful. simple, and economical,:-Nero Or
leahs z
•
Tem TUN of the Wrshinstes Library 001:94MY
of Philadelphia ie to offer too the public an inter
est in a'charitable institution. by offering stock in
shares of one dollar, for which* certificatela given.
With an engraving frilly worth the money paid. As
a still further inducement -to have the shares ta
ken up rapidly, , every stockholder lememised; a'
present ofsome value in addition to his stria oer
tificate and picture.' The funds thus secured by
the, sales of stock are deposited' with Messrs.
George A. Cooke & Co. Bankers,
_No. 83 South
Third Street, Philadelph i a , - to be- # Y them applied
- to the object in view. A charitable public,insti
tution thus receives the benefit, and not 14 private
individnaL Bead advertisement. , . _ •
"BLESSED HE THE MAN WHO MST INTENT=
dune, " quoth .fianclo 'Par often' : Sleep has ofte
been "murdered,"not is Macbeth's case only,.
tint in Many modern initanOni; by Li - diem - don,
Neivons DiAndersilleallacheand albeVof other
.00mplanda.• For all nob theswis remedy, and
tralfteremay'now.excl aint . uldelikd be the man
who Uri/entail the PLANTATION BITTEB8.1"
This delicious GATIIII tudifine Tonle la new buried
by millions; as the greet 'Bealth4itirer,and Be,
storer. Reiotre to buy a bottle,_luidthu t "sleep
on it.". "Be wise in tiree." • ;,
sztirglingrattetozgt
.Ik=rl= l :TRAL SOMMR--)fasErSo OF 00)1112T- ,-
TEE OP ABBANGEMENT%—DETESIONATION 711.411
THE FALL FSEIDEMON Tab ta . ItiltDEST gucastsEvEre
Arrszrrzo.--It affords us; wrissit pleas - lire to an ,
norms the .determination Of' the . Ocaranittee 'of
Arrangements' of the Agriculture' end ',Erotica:
• hind Society (who met on Ilatarday slabs Key- ,
stone Home) to makiitheraltexhibition a grand*
snows& Werennok tnnosagratglate the oorninni'
nity that we basemen at the head of its Oahu who:
bey° the enern Ind abilitylally_torapnisent at ma
_corning Pair the wealth ovthe pomitY in the pro;'
gross of agriculture hi deparfankafe. l
The grounds vs zpw perteetpdae fo'lirt,lte.
for speed the bestreagi.la the larid,iurd we et.
pest to present cattle imEive ihrulr.whiehyould
do honor to any Bair. rAn4deotoportonhi twilit be
RIVOII to .*oompetitoris the 7 .llo depatirasnt
Fanning and .apicaltural implenrontehr all their:
variety, will twinsited for oarnpetitiort:- -
When anistrAipititel mien: alr
Stiobter the Ten Itea t i n altmedir2l3oel Erni
Lomb, Fos, hiengi ar htraien,lleuso9:
and then ntejage ' be "rut meth *imp
fa% --,INGOOf Mop
s`.-r; ''#'.en.`;•;:i
THEI . 24 , Ft !.. o - ' • '
, . 1 49 . A
T." 1 8 6 7 •
• •
GRANT VS." JOHNSON.
THE GENRE'S 'PBAiIIiST laiiiST THE
• The correspondence''' between. Generid:
Graui arnl the President .relaibte_tio the
mewl of peneral Sheri*, hi published.
.
The President e nclose s,n the order to General
Grant, and the latter replies as follows :
Hum. Awe= or iior. trlniTD arkma
WAsulac 4rrow,l).=C Ant:14174 , 117.f ".,.
ate EXCILUDICIT, ANDISZW JOBNI3IIII. Pssemzerr or TM;
•
Minx') 15Taxes: - . • • . •
.BEu—iamb zealot of *our order Of this date, dl
reding the: torsietonent of General G..H. Thomas to
-the command of the: titlf;military cUstrint..' l 2/enemi
Sheridan to the Department of the Missouri. and Geri
nral Hancock to the . Department of the Cumberland;
also; your note of this date.. (enclosing these instrim
tionaj saymg,.."Before you issue instructions to carry
into effect the eirloestd order I would be • pleased to
hear any suggestions you may deem necessary respect
ing the assignments to which the order refers."' .
• I amplessed tonvall , mysltof thisAnvitatkm
urge--earnestly tege--nrge in'thelaama Of t-petriotie:
who havernacrthotal. hundreds alhousands of
loyaljiyee,,ned thaumnds Ofmillionv Or treasure •
preserve the integrity and union of this &until—that"
,this order benot twisted on. It is unmistakably, the
expressed wish of the country that General "Sheridan
should not be removed from his present command.—
•This is a republic where the will of the people is the
law of the land. I beg that their voice may beheard.
General Sherkhm ;has :performed his civil ,duties
faithfully , and intelligently. His remoValistil only be
regarded as an effort to defeat the laws of Congress:—
It will be intertireted by the unreconstructed element_
in the &sub--those who • did all they could to break"
up this Government by arms, and 'now wish to be the •
' only elemerstconsulted as to the method of restoring.
order—as a triumpit....,/t egaboklen them tolsr:
newed Oppositkin to of the • maws, be:_
lievutg that they have the Executive with them. • '
' The services of General' Tbsess in . battiluirks the
Union entitle him to some coesideratkm :,11e,fues re-:
peatedly.entered his protest against ,being assigned, to
either of. the live .military 'districts; sad crify"
being assigned to relieve Gimeral Sheridan. • • .
• Generil.Hancock ought • not to be' removed' froth
where he is. . Hisdepartment tea complicated en%
Which will, take a new, commander: some: time to , be,
come aortainted with... •
There are military reasons, • pecmdary reasons,' and,
above an, patriotic reasons, why , this order should not
be insisted on.
I beg to refer to a letter, : Marked pritide,
wrote to the President when first consulted on the
subject of the change in the War Department. It
bears upon the subject of this removal, and I had
hoped would have' prevented it. • .
1 have the honor to iss, with great respect,: your obe
, dient servant, . . ' Gassrr. • ••• .
Gen. United States Army, and Seely. of War ad interim,
We have not space nor is .riecf%Sary - to
publish . President , - Jefuison's reply• - It. iS
• • - • .
throughout a piece of' aophistrY, which can
not deceive. even himself.. The folloWing ex
tracts and editorial c o mmentsby the - New.
. 1.•
,
York _Tribune, w il l: . give _ a fair" idea of the
tenor of Mr..:Jeteleon % % Ego y to , Cinintt
Mr. JOhison SAYS : • . x
"While I am cognizant of the efforts that have been
meet° retain Gen. Sheridan in command of the 'Fifth
Military District:Tani not-aware that the'tprestirmhas
ever been submitted to the people themselves for deter
frirgoiteri•
theism he.madenp with Gen t Shedder by their - my' ,
tagonist versions of the New Orleans' massacre last
pear , nor the verdict so emphatically rendered thereon
IT the People in theeleetioryof Representatives in the.
mment.Copgrees. IS' he :"Irot aware # Of Sheridan's
dispatch of which somebody' gave to • the , pabllea gar:
bled and most deceiving version ? Has be forgotten a
speech on this New-Orleans - matter which somebody
made in St. Lords ? ' -
Mr. Johnson proceeds •
"It certainly would be unjust to the army to assume .
that, in the opinion of the nation, he alone is capable
of poriimanding the Statfs of Louisiana and Texas, and
that, were he for any ormaavemoved, nn other General
the military servlceot the United States, would be '
competent to ilitithi - place." . •
—Lettis testtbtalWdbya reedy maniple: Suppcee
Con rr
gress, 'orearmoriblim next November , should im
and.reructreldr, Johnaim by a ontninitryProc.eed
. g.Mid..belrig asked recite reasons, should respond—
.% certainly would betteinat to the Americait-People
to assume that no One but Andrew Johnson is capable
"of performing the &dieter Presidentl-:.howsiould'
'relish that Use of ingnraradif -Mot-6mi will Zs
-Mite that outer mew are air at,for President mole is ;
but does that mecca° Jriniffllin election? • , 7
13heridan's removal no peraonarmatter. -Its incite
ments are an--gravely public and general. Be is-de
prived of his high trust nalrediv because hle discharge
of its duties Contemplates and taverna Cattail] and ear-.
.17 tviumplf of that Reconstruction popsy which. Con
gress prescribes and liti.Johniori-la bent on defeating.'
And, when hir:-Jllinscri asks' why '"no other General"
can do as,well ae Sheridan. the answer is ready—" B
ecause if he does, - -yee.will doubtless serve him as you
. did his predecessor.... is not that Sheridan gees out,
but that Johnson turtle himont, and for what, that pre
sages serious trOuble. • '
_.• • . • • .
The President says truly of Gee. Thomas; • . .
-
"He has not failed, under the most trying circum
stances, to enforce the laws, to preserve peace and or
der, to encourage the restoration of civil authority,-and
to promote, as far , as possible, a spiritof reconciliation.
His administration of the Department of the'Cumber
land wilicertainly compare most favorably with that of'
Gen. Sheridan in the Fifth Military District.' There of
fairs 'appear to be in a disturbed condition, and'. a bit. -
ter spirit of antagonism seems to- hive . resulted from
Gen. Sheridarie management." • -
-Now, the record is - clear that Louisiana ton been
decidedly more tranquil for the year past 'man Tennee
see, and with far fewer outrages arid murders. We are
sure Gen. Thomas. hen done all - that' man could do,
considering his means ; yet there hav e been -scores of
-assassinations-not confined to - .either • patty with .
' deadly's ffrays several:nubile - meetings.. '"The dis
turbed condition".and "hitter spirit of antagonism" are
mare pronounced and unquestionable than' those of
Louisiana. 'Yet the commander of ousts virtually dis
graced while he of the other is commended.' With
what reason f ,
Mr. Johnson is walking On the edge of aprecipice:—_
Reis a bold man ; but there may be temerity which is
not genuine courage. His fortunes and fate are of,
-small account.; but the country needs adjustment, se ,
:clarity, tram quility, , . repose, and he persists In keeping it
un'ettled, distracted, angry and apprehensive. It can
not be thus disturbed and convulsed forever to humor
the caprices and gratify The passions of any one ; and
he should be admonished to forbear. ere It is too late.
. for Owing to GeneralThomas' ill health, Gen
eral - Hancock will. succeed general • Sheridan.
Sheridan will take . Hancock's place in the Der
partment of the Missouri.. • .
. Famon, English and Ainertcaia cloths, all.style4, and
of the finest qialities, at D. A. Smith's, Centre street.
. .
Drawn, Neck-ties and Dese r t:6 sat everypiste, and
at redneed prices, at D. A. 13ntith , s, Centre street. • •
Ere • w4:na•N in another coluxim picking grapes' or
Spectra Wine. It la an admirable article, used in the
hospitals and by the first class familial In Paris, Lou-.
don and New York, Preference to Old Port Wine., 7 -7
It is worth'a trial, as it gives great eatisfacticn.
.*
FRENCH PADDRD J.INIIf DETLX.4 & beautiful article, a
Siattb.s, Centre itrtaeet. • • . .
The quantity sent by railroad this *reek is
60,547 15—by canal 16,040 15—for the week
76,588 10 -tons against 116,407 tons for the
corresponding Week last year.
The trade still remains, without improve
ment. This Region with itnlarge productive
caPacity, is now placed in the position by the
InactiVity of manufacturing operations -and
the .high rates of:transportation on theßead:.
ing Railroad,, of 'merely supplying 'the surplus
required by the market and which. the other
regions 'Cannot furnish. And even this is done
at - prices Which are noti . remunerative to the
operator.- The immediate future of the trade
here is glbomy and pregnant with trimble to
all classes : . dependant upon it. We - never
knew it to be in a mare*preseed condition.
•
'The trade sums tip this week as 'follows,
.compared with Isat,year :
lIKNOVIL.. OF. MIERDIL
LOCAL Vo'rzowl.
THE COAL TRADE.
.
Anglintalli 1 867.
,
1866. ' • 1867; • •- . -.-
•, • mT. , emir:. W. ; ram: I .DLO.. ,
.----- -----.-- - - ~.--,---- ..--:-..-...-
PARRR 99,199 2,620,762 60,548 - 2,127,298d492,534
Sebnyl Can .97.268 • 889,473 16,041 610,667jd277,807 -
L Val R 8..44,027 . 1,2511,741 43,033.1,324,409] 67,665
- Lehi% Can 34.099 596.237 24.794 ..536,1351.60.102
Scant - SUL 22,332 • 664,035 ; 27,172 • 833,832 149,8e1
-
• . . li'th 8,155 1 - 271 09 . 5 'lO 536 :26 9 ,077'0 2 3 018
By R Road 17,962 198,534 .1.7,519 516,6091 918,072.
By Carnal:. .470 '.14,407 714 12,9881 -1.619
Del I Hid 41,820 919,905 94,348 • :796,8461 23,059
Wa.ng Bth --. ; 2/8,601 ' ' ..- 127,6471 91.154
o Nth
Shamokin.. .15,587 368,937: 4,087 31005 5 64,682
Trevorton.. 1•,486 3 . 4,056 : ....,55 29,555 a • 6.491
Short Mt... 4,54758,114 . 44,631 4 19,513
LV. C 0... ~ - 86,262 ;• - - 39,996 : £1,794
WilliainaVn . • 29,290 : .. 62,743 '. 33,4 - .3-
Broad Top. 4,307 173,093 .14,751 . 151,438 d 21.630
• . --..-• -__. _ -...___.- ...,--.
331,199 9,.111;139 244,041 7,1 -,
194,334 . •
1
- -- ------ ---.-- r. . -
244,041 7,694,334 .' • - - ' ;
.87,148 416,805 .
By the above it will be seen that the aliif-r,.
meats have fallen orgfrem this Region io fai
thia season, 770,241 tons, as coinpared witli
last
. season,,while the Lehigh Valley
road has lncreasedas shipments - 67,665 tons;
Scranton, South, 149,871 tons ; and the.
Pennsylvania Coal Conipany, 318,072 'tot:te l .
The total decrease of shipments from all the
regions so far this 'yeax, amounts to 416,805
tons. The total loss of tbia . Region will
Without doubt; exceed before the dose of the
season, a rUillion of teas.." • •
. SALE OF f3cßeirum COAL AT AUCTION.-412.
auction - sale of seventy-five thouriand tons of
Saranton Coal, took' Place' in New York on
Wednesday last. The following.pricer; 'were
realiied Leung, $3 75®54 .124 Stelimboati
75@54 12 , ;:Broken,' $3 80@$4.00; Egg;
$4. 25a54 -37 ; Stove,•s4 4004 90; Chest: 7
nut, $3 .85. The attendance Wit's-quite nu
merous, but the bidding was rather spiritless:
Compared with the sale of Scranton :tale
July , 31st, the. following , are the average
Flats t
Juts 31.: Aim. 28. I. &D.
Lump,- average..;s4.36 $3 94 d 42 de;
St. Boat,: J., 4 30 3 94 11.36 "i
Grate, "° ...::4 - 28 -‘ '3.90.d 38 "
Egg,". ... 428 4-31 •'3 ,0
Stove, " '4 49. '4 65 •16 "
Cheatnut,.. " ...- 399 • 385 'll'l4- "'
,
Compared witti.the sale of Penruiyjvarda
ComPany's•CoM.A.eguat, result-is as
follows: " • - _
Aug: 21. 'Aug. Dko.
Lump, airiFsge—sl4 94 ' -•
•
Bt• Rtiat7 • - •.. 4 65 3 94 .d 71'etth
Grate, " ... 455 '3-'9O d 65
Egg,... 426 491.: 6,."i
Stove, "..4
,87 465 28 1 .1
Chestnut` ;...« • 3 85, •
t 4 Villa Thuiull:migiltioiLi,"
JUNE 1, lan.
- -
lismAoststaL Atm Itzioneo stausau.D. •
From Pottoville to Pidladedstdo. , . Olt
• do. do ...Pert Itlehouied- - • • 'SOT
-o HeWYoel4 drawl:askoft ,.
_ .
'Prom Pottsville to Pldladelplata • ' • St 08
4k, do New York,' drawback 9 . 88
Prost Brad& Clank to Canal t hula- .
•ngindoidft '
3 -do Ptd Ph di iladersB4:via Notth Perm& R. E.z . 9do
-- tolMwesilapida Malt J. OaatralN.4l.:,; ~9 td
do *Port dotauxon:i - 4. - ..;..- t A t •,;9lO
419-! 'to New York. • - 7 " - • 948 .
do_ t.o Ned, York-via' Del Div; and -AarltalAPa."
tacluftrAo : •
• 2 21
.17,41-7.fterNaw.lforklis-Nor*Caaal.,ll.' . 89.
110rldlroboken via. Norris and &lox E. N..: 110
''do-tollew ---•- - 990
po9l,ll:llsabetb9oBB4oßo4\ 7 New York Ca.'
i t a it l idataace , alaitra 059 talles;- 0 : 1
• •
W ei 8 40 =113eaolarr- 840
Realm Minas 19 11.0
Esta Ay Aicn iin woic AiC uevi iT ri ll oounel . A etri ef. it t ee L otaif A thi * ,3 7 e
fmro t j? poLair o tts. g ee
villo; four Conk:ries an the tract and two others partly
non it ed &omit • Whole area nearly TOO area,
• —r et u k u m cifgr a M o Mon application. .
.Civintogineers, Pottsville,
• .Taly 27..61:• !.: : . • 304 ,
. . . ~. y rr i. g in g , front Eltrabethpoet.
NE4 'fork - - 9 50 1Newheryixwt
1
Pan ju,, e 4.....;„...... 1 . .40 New London
Newport ' • , 140 Pawtueltet.'...
n wton - ..: .
,;„-.„ 1 !11l Tato:tun
Nmviati =l . Se New Haven.; -
Providenee........*... 1 .40 Portsmouth ,
. I „ Tarwac, • 100 New Bedford. : ...
Middletown. I 25 Sri
Portland - - - I ' l5 ord - '
Salem. - A. 76ifindeon. ' , • -
Albany .. .. -
.80,Lyrm , • .
IGHTS. • :•
New
IPhilsidPia.. •
ew Yor d .
k rO
New L0nd0n .....:.. : 1
1 75
Newport 1 . 75
New 8edf0rd.......: 1 75
Newburyport........ 2 15
Newark.... , • • 1 15
115
Portland ' 00
Providence • 1 75
PaWturket.' • 90
qulncyPoint::.:.... 9 00.
.... 2 25
Salem 2 00
I"Salesborg - ' 240
I Tnomantown • 250
I Troy 1 40
arrived for week.' . '
COAL
. .„
FriAnhui trovia Pte
Boat= • 2.00
lestudm 2 CO
... .. .2 26,
. 1 20'
Rast Cambridge 2 00
Fall River • "1- 75
2.16
1 50"
Hingham, .; . • • 2'lo
Hudson• • 40
Lynn . 200
Malden * shVovoigd.;:...2 26 I
:Medford . 2 01. i
. 2 00
New Haydn . .. ---
Williamsburgl . 20
185 meek! =4,61 Waif
. Frieghto fro
ToPhiladelphis• •
New York.. ' •
ilreights from Oeorirelown or Alexandria
To Philadelphia • • 25(4 • •
New ,York. • . • _2 , 10121
12.5.
T,HE' COAL .M4RT,TS.
PERM Or GOAL 13Y Thz coal
!!ff!M!EMI!ffl
• AT' PITILADELIiIimi,„
AlpB EdEnnibt 6111PMENTS.
" • Aug. 29, 1367..
Baliqlkill Red Ash Prepared, 4 25g 4 50
Chestnut, - ' 2 75g 290
" -White Aeh.Lump 4 00g ' •
St. Boat and Broken 00g
• • 3 00® 4.05
Stove...:. 3 00® 4 05
Vhestnuf, 2 90g
,to genet 31t. Lump; - 00®4 15
". St. Boat and Broken.... 4 003 4 15
4 0003 ,
", ". Stove ' 4 003
" Chestnut, 2 9023 300
Lehigh Lump ' 5 2515
St. Boat and Broken 5 25'd
Egg ' ' '5 00Q1
Stovo - s'oo® - •
4 000
4 750 4 90
".• Chpatiant,,
Broad Top;..
SPECIAL COALS, . 4
600
Rillll .P l4lis, . k u' f3oa p t and Broken.. 4 5 0 @
4 50@
~ - •
.. Eg
Stovg'e. . ' 4 75(
- 3 750 3 P(1.
~ Chestnut
.
The following prices are for shipments east-,of
Stonington, Conn., by - Chas. J. • and J. 'll,
Burnside, Broken • . - 4 756)
4 .75e .
Stove. . 4 75@).
- • " Nut . 3 50(d
Pea • -2 75 , .!
Lorberry Goa, 4 2543 4 50
Franklin, (Lykens Valley) • 5 25
Or All peals desired to be reported as vtillhe
put under this head, provided the quotations are fur
nished by the.parties interested, • ,
AT NEW YOBli.
Atig. 29, 1897.
SchoylW,Tted Ash by Boat Load 5'75Q - 6.00
• --- Mestnut, " " . 4 00Q,
White Ash Lump .. ... 5 25Q
" Steam Boat' and Broken.. 5 25i
" Egg....-...:.. . ...... .... 5 25Q 550
" Stove • • .5 25Q 5 . 50 .
" Chestnut, ' 4.00 Q
• Lehigh White ASh Lump - 5 650
• • Steam Boat and Broken ' 25Q - •
" Egg. . - 5 25Q' , 5 37
" 1. Stove ' 5.25 Q 5 37
• ". • Chestnut. 4_500
- • Lehigh Coal at Illiitabethporti • '
.Lump; . by Cargo - 5' 50Q
St. Boat and Broken" . tit •
5 25Q
5 250%5 50
Stove, ". " ' 5 25t 650
Chestnut - , • 4.75Q
gel anion Coal at Elizabethport.
Lump, Auction prices _ $ 3.94®
Steamer,.. " • .. 94e
. Grate, . • ." . . 3 900
Eg. • . 4 n
Stov g e, - , • " ..... .;. • 4 65Q e
Chestnut, " • 85Q
At private:sale 25 to 40 Cents a ton. advance.
Freight to. New-York 60 canto per ton:
.
Penna. Companyht Cial at 111!urbtirgh
• Auction prices '
St. Boat and 'Broken, .
Stove, . . . • " .
Chestnut, .
At private sale 25 to 40'centa &ton advance,
'Frelght to New York- 70 bents per toa.
Del.; Tiluducin Coos Coal at Ronadeitt,
(Circular pricesiot August and September; MT.) ,
Lump - . • $5,10'
Steamboat • • . • IS 20 •
Grate - 5 40-
iff4g • ' 5 50
Stove • - • 5.05
~ Prom Nonntiout to New York 10 mote a ton freight
• 'AT BALTIMORE:.
. • Aug.' 30, 1867;
'To trade, froth .yard or wharves. •
Wilkea're h Pittston W. Mb " $6 00,5 6 25
Lykerts Val. R.' Aash... 6 250 6 . 50.
Shamokin; white or .11.: Ash • 5 50g 600
Delivered to consumers.: .. , ' 7.00@ .7.50
Georges' creek and Cumberland Coal..
• •
f o."b. gipping . Locust Point for. 4iLt- 4 5 5 a
GeorgetowwD. C • . 4.23W4 GO
Pivegrove CoalT;ade for 1567
Amonnttransported during the lest month: -:
Lorberry' Creek
Good Spring
Union Canal Railroad
Cei; Rai[random: for 1.867.
The followingia the quantity of coal transported over
the
. following Railroads for the week ending on Thurs.
day evenhsg
. ,
;Mine Hill dt R. 21.597 IT
Schuylkill Valley ' 3,356 13
Mt. Carbon 994 14
MIII Creek • 5,212 OT
Mahanoy & Broad Mt:....:...:..9,4,416 01
Little SchnyikM • • •
' BLACE.BAND IRON ORE. •
, sent over the Mill Creek. Rail Road For the
,week
Weekending on Saturday last,
Previously.
ebigi- &Mahoney - COM Trade for 11907.,
LWeek ending with last Sattirdiy.. '
, _
- - Nixes car Snnuiras..
Trenton' Coal Company
'Moron 'Etna
'Rehm:my:Co
Delano Colliery
Glendon Coal Company
Rathbun, Steams & Co
R. S. Sllliman. -
McNeal Coal & Iron Company..
Kniekerbixlter Coal-Company...
Thomas Coal Company
• Williams 4k. Herring •
Shamokin Valley Coal Company
New Beaton::.
Otlux !Rappers
Total. •.. • . . .. .
Cirereponding Week . lasi year...
Decrease
Incssase.
ilrnaf
St. Clair
Port;Carbon.....
Pottsville ' •
Seinaylkill - Haven
Anbnin -•
Port Clinton
• Total for week::
4 , .retrionaly this year...
•• . •
To.nrae timei hat year
Irmrease..
Decrease.
Lehigh Coal Trade for 1867.-
. For week eliding on Saturday:: ...
NAMNOAD. CANAL.
cIFF.I3ATORS.
max. wrap. wax. ro,4i
Balaton 4,681 86,950 2,308 42,
Bast Ungar: Loaf.- 4,r58 86,164
Plo29 . oint, ..... 231 9,995 206 2.t
2,775 79,175 2,51e2 91.1
Web* . - ..... 1,107 94,795 261. 16,1
Core Bra -.
__ s , l
libberyale Cad 3 U
Cu.. 1,873 44,135 766 . ,
5t0ut....... 1,088 21,012 986
Connell Ridge - '1,975 49,266 1,259 19,1
Buck Maintain....„ 1,670 33,297 718 - 25,1
New York' Sraoldgh 4,899 69,5138 191
Honey Brook Coal C, 11,1111 94.670 661 1.9,1
German C.oal Ce 546 .24,571 93 4.
Splng Mt. Coal co. 2.386 91,499 287 1,1
Coleraine - •-.56,283 276 6,1
Bence ••- 7.0 80 -
Lehlgh Zinc
J. B. Reber & Co.,
/IdN : 64 589 Ts 3 , ,
Ktdeicerooexer ,1„,0111 :05,913 • •1,
Coal Itan - Cool : :
Rathbun Caldwell Co (); 25,626
Glendon Coal Co. . 19,062
Dekil ifil el 0m..., : 830 ts,,rot
Eliill. 2,373 _10,420
Baltimareos4l 00, 4 104 28,804 96 -_ 16?
... ,9,7a3 191 -
Andemtled.. - 610 6,879 07 4,1
WWI 411111a911. co_ • 0 , ---11,240 • 1%1
isodeßelighr'l9s - 10,300 95 - 5,1
77 • 0,6/7 1.71 1 - 4 4 .(
. 9,0 t,
Menne ' 7,100 97,768- 188
h. VOW &Ray go 4 • 10,006 1117,906
Pleb/412mm •• -
other Mailmenslatlit Becui * - 171 - 2110
North Mahancz ••
N. Jonles_ooll Co.. .11;16 11,168
7 Wl= Coed Cki ' • . 1,1109 ' •
111499 Coal Co.. 7 .‘„. • 7,659 • ,
11,•
WY oll3 ±*94 l 00 4 16.3 09 • 6.00„
' . . ts,sa ,1147 - 4,40276 - 71815
• `, - 94,794 setaa ', KT% 66,
11°131g: 'err 1.860,t0 _ ,
'ago Tlildrin. Igo
*?•••••
A ' - 7 ,:::; 110 ,! 1 ' 4 1 . ? • s
NEW ADVERT'RENTS.
Eire latiaiiiii r illiclaime;.4tna.
P t AUCTI and EL GILII Aare., Cor.sta and
Adria Sta., POUSYnkt. Ang- 854 EL
GAMETE
J W. GEARY
POPMELLA o=lf Engintero _
Aug 34, =UMW& .FMILDELCO.
$ .BzwAin)4m be paid the deiettion
of Iheperso or - persona; originating', and dr
" =dating theilazderaus moats leading"ta . injme
character SAWI.I3KINS,
Apg . • " Railroad St. Pottkeille.
. - •
:NOTICE: TA THE PERU&
All the lona of eramelrffegetettle Mediehle
pleseetail atXr:' George vv.
_Mottle:etre Stere;rezt
door to the Easier Rouse, where all of Dr. cornea'
Great 'fedi= Berae4m can be had, ' •
:Arkkaat 3L wr„ • - • 95-
MIBENCH AND DNOLISER SCHOOL.
;4--)tra. ZUSTIs will re-open her school for ,
rang' bdtes on' MONEDAY.:September , /Men:torsi
classes will alto be formed for- inernetton in French
and Abstr.-% For tern, ate., Apply at 105 Centre street,
Monds!*ldttlon. • ,Arg. 85-3 t•
All:r.:` COAL' MINERS, }lathed and: Furniee
men, or any m_ en at dangerima .work, can have
their .11vee insured at the :rate of $9.50 - per year on
$l,OOO, a term of twettfy . years. b 9 addressing •• •. •
• .' JAMES It.ftaTEß. • • .
Attorney awl limarance Agent:
August-31. '6? 85-Iy ";* • • • Pottsville:,
*IIIIIIT JALES!. - :.riatrrr JARS
' Best In the market. Glaskaln.tigtkandielf-aeallog.
Stone; with cortia with and without_ 'coyer.:..Tamato
.jars. Jelly glances and cum dishes and lands Al3O,
a general saaortnient of Croetery and 'ttlastmare, at
greatly reduced orkea, just received by. .-
July 13„.67, 2S-tf . J.& TROXIILL.2Sd Centre St.
• PrtASION; CESTIIICATES;
N'' 7 l l - MO NI I
.• The Beini 811IIILS1Pelig018614 SePtelnber Oh. leas
will, be colled.ed promptly by calling upon pi:addressing
ALEXANDER S. SILLIMAN
Oensiim digent,:Poitsville,3oenusylvania.:
Atigzust ' •
LETTER Remaining Unclaimed in_
' the Poet Office, at - rottayille, 'State of. Pennsylva
nia, on the 30th day , of Angnst, • 1267:
•To obtain any.. of these letters; the applicant most call
for "adoertfaedlettera,.glyi the date of this, Bat, and
pay one cent for advailaing. .
If not called fin : within one month, 'they will be sent
to the Dead Letter Mlles:— = - •
Amole Datil Hantaman Prof GMeyer Mr ' • .
Bracken Wm .. .W. • , Kinihan Wm sh
Cowing J W • laverty Dfartin, Morgan Itachael
Connor-Mrs' - B • , McDonald Mary
Davis E MKennedy Mrs sh Qneeny John ••
.Evans Mrs Leddy,Peter - • 'Reeder Chas C -
Grawser Jacob Lyons Kate eh . Rees Edward eh
OR:person Howell Laird John • •Iteea Margaret
Ranghawout S. Marques Sherber Andrew
Ifonghney Jas 2 • Minden JP. . Yates John .
August 30, 137 • KILLYMAN. P. M..
COMPLETE MANURE
MANUFACTURED BY
. - 11 - EIdRY BOWER
Grays Ferry Road, Philadelphia,
SUP.EI:PHOSPHATE Or . .-LIME, AMMO
NIA AND POTASH.
'.• • • $t . 40(4) t •iso'
V):
• . .
PRIOR $55 PER TON,OF 11;050:1;B15.
•
DISCOUNT TO DEALERS. • - . •
. .
BOOTH.* GARRETT.. or Philadelphia,. Chemists
of high standing in their report of the analysis, say to:
••The constitution of, Mit 'above . . Indicates a decided
m•the composition of a 'Fertilizer by the in
troduction of a 'considerable per - of Potash,
and countenances the chilm invedved in the name
"'Complete Manure,. ••• • .• .
, .
. .•vmdaAmi it MOSS; of Philadelphia, Chemists of
large experience in the analysis of Fertilizers, say.:' •
“'We find from :art-snalysis of your `Complete
mire,• that the; name •• you have given it is certainly
• warranted by its Chemical composition • in addition to
thus cordially - recommending • your Fertilizer from. a•
Chemical stand point, we.sbonid. stale that lie mechan
ical condition is meat 'excellent, being such as to ad
- mit of its use in the_drilttvithout further preparation.”
' The "Complete Mann" bits 'been • used largely on'
various crops, -anti-the testimony . theistic recel•red
proves it to, be the best Fertilizer yet Introduced: .
Orders received and information giVen by' .. •
• •
Cheap Soap!, Goat Soap!
SAPONIFIER!
.. 15.72811 `49,02106
• 4,061 16 , ' -18.064,12
.• 19.810 06 . , 66.091.. IS
TOTAL.
357,80 b 10
154,763 11
24,863 IS
233,331 01
878,918 02
214
10,753
1 34,195
12,096
25.411
70,855
67.997
80,662
21.501
8,996
2.353
ad and Canal IS6
80,433-16
0,013 11
624 ra
19,422 19
3,050 0 4
8,101 13
.16,04016
694,625 11
60.517.16
2,066,750 11
nuts 14
888,402
km. , 72
277,806 10
492,463 18
NOTICE is hereby Ova: to all whom it
L ". •
• • may,coneern, not to interfere with the two
-135, now in mweeasion of Wm. Dileamp, as they be,
long te me, WM' 611ENSIbilfft. '
897 • Schuylkill Haven; July 19 .67 • " -29
,220
,887 • --21.i s stintbetween, the midmaigned, thb- day
,9.33 dlasolyed by mutual consent.
MOS . Signed,. ' J; WArro N i t 'i s .
,el 2 • . • c.P
,004 New York„ &fly 10, 1287 "29- - '
MP,C 63 I - PATENT coroovriorrur or
•
„ , • STEAK IUEIL- To all whom-II
o'ivi Etat Conerersa i-Por ad in ecausideratlon of 111-4-:
'4Cli;; An hand; paid, by JAMBS, • WREN• of the • Boraigh of ,
' p er' , -Potteve, . Connip of
r iklpryLtni, ter Lewis 'Eikenberry.
,'. ill
of Philadelphia, the tempt whereof has beezracknorri „ ;
; - Mitat said"- Elkatiberi has 'sold.' to.' said LOOM!
the tto appl it in the ()minty Of• Bt3 aiilJ,
.. ~ - Adll,,Asttrof on•all. MeanEr...-.w now
; Lin Warm that mar emitter bec-inied,LLSwia • :Awl
=sa e
.sali . zminaprrevaill - Catialrler z lfforassamislar
On-EfellantirZ o =leatita ahleti - letters i
, 4E, dated '..a liri-'4861,4ave berm to y
• the said Lewis Eikenberry by the-United 8 4 • '4lll
persons dears= 'of intimation regarding the. An,Mti
: . otthis Valve can receive the aaine 'at aye:dice in Copt;
On: ' ben tids V fo au- - us&
street:- Thai ellt of Eve persons
, Stearn EnOzurs is 'from ildto alper cent.' on the
~.e i dense balle - It castle applied to all old engintA : . ,
, wai - .bWft as reigiloo take part in thisimpart. I
NU , ant. lin . . .. rat. , They din seenra 'from mathentie;
:211i lira ',l .. "." new erightes and Maraca Wang. the' im-1
'IAN :farrsainera on old erigines..' , They can "see the motionl
, "ria armada in Ural street: 'Where I have iron infra- i
,044: + raw wwft•re. the Bart* herein detail. -• it ahoy=
,OSTi -Semen arEnehallausia AM at Alidas - ar BMA
1/ 6 ': EEPakrAlto Wog MUM - JAMS WHEN,
INS' ,:• , r --. . • .i: - IWashizygton Iron Wasiak,' ' !.7
18 , . .Pottesillralieb;Etoall -. • , - - - SAf -• '
. . . . .
lejailarsare ir.6o: on hind '
WWI' QIYELTOUSVINe•
tr • S'SVA .
.-• : .
JIM uggdm i . • r , • , •••
4 FT , co acs and •": 3- I
BUSINESS:
, *P , gP
Free' f;•&vn Adillterati6n
PACKED IN BAGS 175 Ibs SACS
DIXON, SHARPLESS it,; CO.,
SOLEAGSNTS,..•
.• . .
•,
40 filantiOlVbayves,•inilla,delphin
Atigwt . S t • 4-15 s,
NATRONA REFINED
Coneenttated Lye.
2 cts, a lb,for Superior Hard Soap.
TWILVE POUNDS OF SOFT SOAR
FOR QNE CENT.
,
EVERY FAMILY ; C AN. MAKE. THEIR .
OWN , SOAP. .
ALL VARIETIES SOAP.
AS EASILY MADE AS =A CUP OF COFFEE,
Is a new, Concentra:ted Lye; for making Soap,
just diso . :„..wered
CatEiLNLAND , IN TIIE. "ARCTIC BEA.9,_It
and la :comppsed mainly of Alumlnate of
El,,Oda, which, when mired with IIEnSIC FAT,
produces the • .
BEST DETERSIVE SOAP
. TUE" WOF,t.I4D
1 Box will make 175.1b5. good Soft Soap,
its equivalent in superior Hard Soap,
Retailed kir all Druggists and Grocers
• in the United States.
tia- FULL RECIPES EVirITII E4CHrsda...-to
Dealers eanobtain it wholesale hien/eV,
each:eiintaliting 48 .boxes, at a liberal
dis'ennist, of ihe wholesale:Drocerw.and.
Druggists in • all the toirnstind cities of
the United States, or of • '
L...
cu l FFolls IPEIVIIMERTON,
iatineria Agent, " - • • •
~- . PITTSI3I*}, PNCSG,.
.. . •
. , . . .. . . ..
Aug 21, '67
GENERAL OT E
11.1 . A JET H. ...-Iliereliyotrer
llR l' tiame as an Independent candidate for the
of
fice crf TREASURER:of Schuylkill courty- •
()DREAD SELTZER, lionyeginu Townslrlo.
August:3i; 67` • • ' 3 5 -6 V -
NO T ICE.—TWo Goatitakeitup atGreen
a wood; the: owners can-bare- themby paying
expenses. : If not:elaimed they win be sold'accordlng
to law. Ang. 31, la..
DISSOLUTION OF • CEI-PABT
i9fERBIIIP.The Co-partnership 'hem
tofore existing between the undersigned: in the Oro-
C_eri',..FrOvisionalonr and Feed trusinese, under the
Arm. name of Bohemian &Wien% was this day die
-801704 hp mhtual donsent. THOS,•BOHANNAN,
OILAB.'•W. SOHNBHR
P 4 18,67
. • .
„
NO
~ ,
-.-. NOTtCE...The business will he" eandticted at
Meeid:stand, Market street, by the -"undersigned, who
solicits a eontinnance of -the patronage extended to the
late tinxi...: .. .. „ , . C. W. SCHNAELR.
'.. August, 24, , 67' - . . ' -• 34.410
yttia,DINMOIGIITTIOW Ole CO-PALIIT
NERAMP.—Notice is hereby given that
the(Co-partnership heretofore existing between the un
dersigned, in , the wholesale . provision business under
the Arm' name of J.)ItIB' BESSB.B.; is pis day
dissolved by mutnal,tonsent..,Thosie having claims
against the late Arm, will present .them to Jacob Del
bertqr., and those indebted to the firm. will make
paynient to the same. :" JACOB DEIBEBT,:pI.,
801111 9 11 01 Haven,'ug. n, - - 83-61`.
irs - kilfovics.7—The copartnenstdp heretofore
existlngthetween the - rmderalgned, under the
firm manic, of W. & J. Helms,. is hereby diseolved , '-by
mutual consent. 'The business will he continued bq
John If elms;' who is authorized "to' collect all monies
due to the late firm. • - - WILLIAM- Eftl4ll,
• Ashland, 9tig.-3,
• NOTICE is hefeby given that the:capart
• nership_. heretofore existing. between R.
Boone and G. W i lielter, of. the Borough of. Bt. Clair.
under the:name of Boone & 'Keiter, is'thin day diS•
solved by mutual : consent. The birsiness of said firm
will be settled by R. Boone. . R. BOONE.
The'businetsiwinieret4tei be continued at the old
stand by the undersigned. R. BOONS. ;
SL'Olsir, keg. . _ .82-60
Jrilei.Blllll M COP dolighttill new
wino. by Mks /am Owl.. lobe beelett $ O 4OO
Won Robigiva lupe m poetri, !al ninf mid - ( 41
row= be pubs! matenceelatall.l6.
lfor Isla - AMAX
TN, le` ; -
LEdAL NOTICES:
A . DM INUIT iItATeR 3 B NOTlClfir—Where
as,, Letters of )411We:ration to the estate of Sam
uel Haub:lnger; late of the Borough , of Potbritile:
ceased, have been granted tof he subscribers,—All per-
Boris indebted tO said estate are requested to make tra
mediate.payment. and those having claims against the
'same to present them without delay to .
• . EMMY RDMONDS. . .
: I — ' 72llR - e :1
• U. S. Mittrug AT ,11 OFFICE, ' '
. " • E. p. Or PIENNIMVANIA.,/
PRILADRLPITIA. An,gast 24th, • 1267.
T.
is io give Notice : That m the.°4l - day
X . of August, A.D., iBs, a Warrant in Bankmpiny
was lamed melon the Ihnite of Richard' D. fieboener .
of. S Clair. in the County of Schuylkill, and State of
Permsylsanis. who has been' atthulged a BanAcrnpt. on
Ids own Petition: that the payment of any Debt* and
'delivery of any property beWnging . to each Bankrupt.
ha him, or An his. use, and the transfer of any MOPerti.
by him - are forbidden b law: that a Meeting of the
Creditors,of the said to prove their Debts.
and to 'choose one or more assignees of hie Estate.
will be held ars. Court. of Bankruptcy, to be'. holden
at Pottsville, Fetnrylkill County, Pa., before John P.
Hobart, Esq.. on the . 22d day - of tent il a xim er,
telt at lb o do* A. IL P. C.". -
XnE Bt. 17-3.§-811 U . s..mantal. as Messenger..
• D_& KARSII&TIS OFFICR,. I
. • R. D. oi-Panroon.vaina, • •
• Purnanztiqui, August 48th, 1882:,' ) '
"Phis give . Notice That on the 26th clay
1. of-
August, A. D., 1647, &Warrant In Bankruptcy was
leaned against the estate of ROBIDIT RATCLIFFE, of
Tamaqua. in. the Comity, of Schuylkill. and State :of
Pennsylvania: who has been . adjudged a Bankrupt; ou
his own Petition; that. he payment of any Debts and
delivery of anrproperty belonging to such Bankrupt,
to him, or for hla and the transfer of any property
by him are forbidden by law ; that' a Meeting of the
Creditors of !herald Bankrupt, to prove their Debts,
and to choose one or more wadi/wetted hls•Bstain, , wW
be held at a Court of. Bankruptcy, to be holden at the
off= of - lONS P. HOBART, in Pottsville. Schuylkill
County, Ps., before JOHN P. HOBART, Req.. Regia
tei. on the 24th .day of. September, A. D .1861,' at 10
o'clock, A. M. „ • • P. C. IDTAIA RIM
August 9L-35-4t s U. a Mantua u Meow:ger
• 11. S. MARSHAL'S OFFICRI
. Mow PINNSVINANIA. • "
PHILAPELPICA. August Y.Sth, 1867. -•
This is to Five Notice .That on the 26th day of
August, A, D. 1867, a Warrsatin Bankruptcy was
issued against the Estate of 17WHKRICK' REM, of
North Manketm Township, in the County of Schuylkill,
and State of -Pennsylvania. who has been adjudged a
Bankrupt, on his own Petition; -that' the payment of
any Debts and delivery of, any property belonging to
such Bankrupt, to him* '
or for his use, and the transfer
of any property by him are forbidden by law; that &-
Meeting of the Creditors of the said Bankrupt, to prove
their debts, and to choose one or more assignees of his
Ratate, will, be. held at a Court of Bankruptcy, to be
holden at the office of JOHN P. HOBART. in the Bor,
ough -- of • Pottervil7e, 'Schuill County. Pa., . before
JOHN P. HOBART, Esq.. Register. on the 27th day of
-September, A. D.,1367, at 10 o'clock, A. M. •
P. C. ELLMAKER,
• August 31-35 3t • 11'8, Marshal, as Messenger.
• ' . 11. S. MARSHAL'S OFFICE.) -
•, • B. D, or Psionortvaura,
PLIMADELPIIIA, August 28th.,1661. 3 .
rri his is so give Notice : - That on the 26th day of
• A nos 4 - I‘. D., 1867, a Warrant in Bankruptcy was
isimed against the "Estate - of JOHN BECK, of North.
16mbeim TOwnship, in the County' of f3chirylkill, and_
State of Pennsylvania, who has been adjudged a Bank
on,his own Petition ; that -the payment of ' any
Debts and delvery of -any property belonging to sudi
Bankrupt, to him. or for,his use, and the transfer of
any property by him are. forbidden - by law: that a
Meeting of the Creditors of the said Bankrupt, toprove
their Debts, and to choose one or more assignees alibi
'Estate; will be held at a Court of Bankruptcy, to be
holden at the office of JOHN P. HOBART, in the 80r..,
ongb of Pottsville, Pa., before JOHN' P. HOBART,
Esq., Register, on the 26th day of September. A. D.,
1601, at 10 o'clock, A. IL • • P. C. FILIEAKER,
Atignst 51— 35 3t 11. S. Marshal, as Messenger.
• .11. S. MARSHAL'S OEFIHEI
•" - . E. D.. 0 P PCB TitgleVANIA,
Pnir.amirmi, August 19th, 12.61.
rids is to ;rive Notice.: That on the 12th day Of
August, .A. D... 1867, a Warrant in Bankruptcy
Was %Sued against the Estate of WILLIAM DONALD
SON of Pottsville, in the County of Schuylkill. and
State of.Peunirylvania. who has been adjudged a Bank-,
rapt, onliftiown Petition; that the payment of any
Debts • and delivery of any property belonging to such
Bankrupt, to-him, • or : for his use, and the transfer of
any property 'by him - are forbidden by law that a
Meeting of the' Creditors- of the said Bankrupt, to
prove their Debts, andto chorale one or mere assign
. ees of his Estate, will be held at a Court of Bankrupt
cy, to be holden in the' Borough of Pottsville. Schuyl
kill County. before JOHN P.. HOBART, Esq.. Rego
'ter, on the 16th day. of September. A. D , "1667, at 10
o'clock, A. M.. • P. C. ELLMAKER,
- 'Aug 21 7 .34-3 t - • 11 S. Marshal; as Messenger.
'.U- S. MARSHAL'S OFFICE,
' .P.tur....untrota. August 19th,1861.
T
his is to give Nosiest r That on the 10th day of
Auguet, A. I)., 1861, a: Warrant in Bankruptcy,
was.istmed against the Estate Of JAMES C. OLIVER,'
of Pottsville, in the County. of Schuylkill, 'mid State
of Pennsylvania, who has been adjudged a Bankrupt,
on his , owri PetttiOn.; that the, payment of any Debts
and delivery of any property,belouging to such Bank
•rupt, to.himi or for his nee, and..the transfer of any
property by him are forbidden by law .‘ that a Meeting
of the Creditors, of the said Bankrupt,' to. rove their
debts, and to chooie one or more assignees oP his Be
tat e, will be held at a Cond. of Bankruptcy, to be
holden in the Borough of Pottsville, before JOHN P.
HOBART,&o.., Register, on the 10th day of Beptern•
ber, A. D.:1067, at 10 o'clock, A. M. ' •
P.O. BLLMAREEL U. S. Marshal, as Messenger.
,
'August 24, 'tit : . .
N THE,ORPHANS 2 COVRyIIF
SCHUYLKILL COUNTY.
In the matter of the estate of. George •Bramm, dec'd.
The undersigned, appointed Auditor by the Court to
Make dietribution of the moneys in the hands of Geo.
W. Drumm, acting execntor of said deceased. as per re
port of the Auditor restating anclresettling the account
of said executor, , will 'meet the parties interested..for
the purpose of his appointment, on FRIDAY, the 6th
day of September, 1167, at 2 o'clock, P. M., at his of-
Ace, .No. il l Centre street, Pottsville. . -
WILLIAM SMITE', Auditor.
83-411.'
Afictit.l.7, 'GT
N THE COII UT OF. COMMON PLEAS
OF SCHUYLKILL COUNTY. .
M. M. Ketner, . • . • . •
vs. . tr Jane Term, 1667. •
' Danl. Haley and Vend Exp. • • -
Geoige Geiger. J . Money-in Court,.s6l6 61.
The -undersigned, - auditor • appOinted by the said
Court, to'make distribution of the moneys in Court
upon the above stated Vend. Exp., hereby gives notice
that he will meet the parties interested, for the purpose
of his appointment. on Saturday, the 3tst day of Ang.,
ISM', at his office in. the - Borough of Pottsville, at 4.
'O'clock, P. M, : • WICK. SMlT.U;Auditor. -
Aug. 17, '67. • . 33-It
IN THE ORPHANS' COURT. OF
L SCIIUYI.K.II.I. COUNTY. .
In the matter of the exceptions to the account of •
Reuben B. Iluntzln,ger and David Sharman, executors
of the last,will of George Runtainger, deceased. .
The undersigned, auditor appointed to restate and re
settle said account:and to make distributions of the
monos remaining In the hands of the executors, to and
among those entitled to the 'same. will attend to the
duties of his appointment at his office in the Borough
of POthivllle, on Saturday, the 31kt day of August, at
10 o'clock, in the forenoon of said day, :when and where
all, parties interested are hereby notified to attend.
' FRANCIS P. DRAllliit3, Auditor.
rottstrille,'Aeg. 17, .67. • " . 387 St
LiXEICVTO'ES 9 K NOTICE.- I —Whereaa, the
ohdersigned having been 'appointed executor's of
the estate of William Davies, late. of St. Clair, de
ceased,—Notice is hereby given to those havingelalms
against said estate to make application, rand those in
debted to the same to make payment.
MARY DAVIZI3,
JNO. H. DAVIES;S Executors.
3 at.'
August 11:4 .GT
Great Rush
FOR
2.1.0
-:0:-
210. CENTRE ST., - 210.
Grand. Closing Out Sale.
"...SUMMER .STACK.":
THE NEW YORK CHEAP
PRY. GOODS STORE."
150 Dress 'Patterns 500 Yards Muslin
$2.50, Worth $4.
100 Dress Pattenas
0. 50 s Worth
75 Dress Patterns
$4.50, Worths6.so
MOHAIRS,'
POPLINS,
LENOS,_
GRENADINES
Woo; 'de Mines,
a.c., &c.,
25_
PER CE111*:
DZDVOTION rsou;
REGULIit
N fH
REDigirinU ,
In Ihe . estefs of
TAPI,F.
Domestic::
GDO - 13,$;:" ;
.
0010
_
1 • J.:• , l* -- '• ' - . ririd's, Dia.
Ticlit?, i •Dellignsz . i-- . ... ( awls Env .
permag*-'Wh!lioop2..Ailirts. --,
ibrold'ellieEl. - , , _
__ .
• . L Corsets -I :4' N°l3 . l M- 114 Z7,7 .
tery,etei, ere. %
' A i r - . A5l - :: AD 701,4 - 1 91 . 4 m, REDUCTION OF
_ . ._:_.:___,,,_.::,_- 2 ,.. •,_ . :
.1,5-: - P::7R ,- -.0.E.N.,T
From Our Wormer oLOW 3, *rims.
CAM. T 1! Tip=
TO 83017 RE BARGAINS AT THE
ORLIP NEW YOBS . DRY HOD IWORR
„
340 910 Centie, corner . Norwegian 4l.B
Oirgyi. tlie
Moaner Rowse. April 20,.43T-,16 • Aug. 44,41.4-
2._"•-oco
sTßA.wsEp t ri PL 41*17;,5i
' -
Now groWwelia fin ielpitt: '7 .
r. GILLEN W00D . . 14111- - - .
. .
. _
Amesti, Trimapij: 414'1;1E01 dg
InfesealVe Early, Airriewltariat. Thu
mania ProlEflejutugada orlifateihi TOO;
rird few thasueppi la, vitetirg frAting'next spring:
33 et
corrirrit somour.:-
TITILLI. SOCIETY.
The , Sixteeath Animal EtthibiUan of the Sotlei7
will be held on the 24th, 25th and 26th days of Sep
OZnut,. at.Oralgibtug. Pa. By order of the
. BAML. MADDRE, Rem— , Secty.
-- Augssl l4 . - - sa-et
LOST.—On , ingaat U. A
WEFTS r4D
MID worm. W, between 6 and
m
6 yam old; she bed cbain .around bet
neck. whb,lnew bell attsebed. +6 - •
word will be Pad to gAnY one retarniNt i fi x
throw to the enbietiber. /MD=
.17011 wirr Alt%
EMMEN
FOR 'SAELi- To -LET.
er.lll3Nlr.—lt store . room, and , stable
#4.
Trecon.lbr three horses. 294 Market stmt.
Aug, ST, TT TS- M. SHEAVE& al2ll.
VOX . SIAll 8 • --0 1 11 e Eagles from SO to 33 bone
V power: secondbind ;- 4 loot stroke ; 12 3-8 inch'
bore of cybgder ; which has been rebuilt. AU in good
running - order, tor running a Coal "Breaker, or Saw
Milt. or for hoisting
_out of. a Slope. Can be
on noti terms at the GRANT IRON WORKS.M.
WHEN, Mebane) , City, Pa. Aug.
EbBILVATE 011 VALUABLE
A ; HEAL ESTATE.—The undersigned offers
fbr ale; the following 'Ma . Wan% .satuld& .flehrtit
theism of Leesport.: Bern. Township, iserks
Count?. on the Reading and .Philadelphia Rail
road, eight miles front Beading and eight miles from
Bansinarg,. .
A two-story i eith
excellent etabling. _ • _
• tio. .2. A two-story _
dory Brick Eon Rouse. by, 36 feet.
No 3. A two-story Frame habding, IS by 26" feet.
Aleorrive good building iota: t 9 by .ISO feet The
premires ire all supplied with excellent- water. All
kinds of fruit of the beet quality may be found on the
place. It is also one of the beat pisoea for a lumber'
and coal yard, w hich . Waxes has Aseen csirriesi on
there for a number of years. , -
- Tbe pnwertf will be sold altogether tor ta part.. For
foriberpartinalara apply to •
ABBABA3I B. TOMAS. -
" Leesport, AngmAl3,lfr -
FOR 1411,L1C. 6, Tenable tract of limber Land
contaiswg 275 acres. • altratedin East Brcmawick
Township. Schuylkill *way, within three Waft at
thelAttle Schuyllral• Ballrosd, together withilittroxi
Circular Saw MU to good running order. Part - of the
aboyeland ia clear and -in good tannhtit condo 4o 9.
*beton are erected all the , -necessary farm buildings.
Tam , ' easy, Awl, to, E. B. SALLIDAI4
823 t'. • ' - New.lithuigold; Schuylkill Co., pa. •
. _
(211.411.NTV1ML18... - .Lots for tudeln the netv town
N-N or GBANTVILLE, 'situate on the headwaters of
/kW Creek.-.one sad a half.milee south of Mahatioy..
City, and immedlidely east of theiarge tottery of the
New Boston Coal. Company.. The public mad from.
'Potteville to Idahanoy City. and also from Brockville
and Tuscarora, passes thosugh the Plato- Good water
canbe had In abundance. The location is convenient
.to a number of collieries to thelfshanoy Region. ,For
tern" , am. apilly to AU= FISHER, Engineer at the
place. or to the isabiMriher.lif.UßPHY,
August 10, 32-tf
- •
iWION WOBILYIPOBI SAILPI—The under
-9. signed offers at private sale the lituoptor Fur
ooze Property, situated in Lehigh county. 8 miles
treat Xifferstown, ligation on the East Penna. Raft
row!. Belonging to it are titr acres of
land, 50 scree of which is of the test ping'
fanning land. Also,Ate new Man- I !ieripi
elon Hansa, 9 Tenant homes, nearly ,
as good as new a large Barn for five
teams, Goal shed. to hojd 150 leads of Opal. new
Brid p. ge House and Casting Hoye° and Blacksmith
Sho
Me Wates-povrer isgood always having enough
water to insure a strong blast,. • A new Dam, iniftlelent
for all purposed, was built two years 46—Water
wheel and Bellows as good as new:
The Teams and other personal property and also the
undivided half of a valuable Bed of Magnetic Iron
Ore will also be sold private. and atleasonable terms.
These Works are only for making Cold Blast Charcoal
Metal, which la the best kind for Car Wheels, and has
also been used.for Army and Navy guns.
More Iron , has been made at these works per ,week,
than at any other works of like size, (except two),- in
any of the adjoining comities.
First growth timber, !a plenty within a radius of 10
miles, and mar tan' always be bad to - make a fall
blast. Good Hematite Ore is near enough to haul
with teams. Limestones are within a quarter of a
mile.
As much possession as is necessary to prepare for
next year's blaet will be given to the pm ..sers. •
This is a rare chance for thcie wiag to engage-fn
this business, and is worth the attention of parties
who need.Chareoal metal, for Car Wheels and other
pins Furthe r Information will be given by addressing the
undersigned at Macungie P. 0., Lehigh county. Pa. -
H. M. SIGMUND..
•
' Hampton ntrnace. July 25 157 , HAW -
UNION P.A.OIFIC
R.A.IIRO.A.D COMPANY.
THEIR FIRST MORTGAGE BONDS
The rapid mistress of the Union Pacific Railroad,
now building west from Omaha, Nebraska, and form- -
with- its western connections, an unbroken : line
aeroes the continent, attracts attention to the ;mine of
the First Mortgage Bonds which the Company now of
fer to the pablic. The first question asked by prudent
investors is, "Are these bonds secure fo Next, "Are
they a profitable investment e. To reply In brief:
let. The early completion of the whole great line to
the Pacific In as certain as anyfutare business event can
be. The Government grant of over twenty million
saes of. land and fifty million dollar' in its own bonds
otcth;idly guarantees it. One fonrth of the work is al
ready dme, and the track continttes 'to be laid at the
rate of two miles &day.. • . - -
ad. - The Union Pacific Railroad bonds are brined up.,
on what promises to be ()mot the most profitable lines
of railroad in the country. For many years it mast be
the only line connecting the Athintic and Pacific : and
being without competition, It can maintain re Menem
time rates.. ' • • • .
Bd. 04 miles' of this road are tint:died, and fully
equipped with depot's, loccenotii'es, ears; and two
trains are daily running each way. The materials for
the remaining ft 2 miles to the eastern Muse of the Rocky
Mountains are on hand, and it is under 'contract to be
dam in . September: , , . ,
4th. The net esimlngs of the section already finished
are several times greater - than the gold Interest upon
the rust Meitgage Bonds. upon such sections, and if
not another Dille of the road were bat; the part 'al
ready completed would not only pay Interest and ex
penses, but be profitable to the Company.
6th. The - Union Padflc Railioad bonds can be Leaded
only. as the road progresses, and therefore can never be,.
In the market unless they , represent a aorta rine pro-
6th. their amount la Aridly limited by law to a sum
equal. to what is granted by the 11. S. Government, and
.for which it takes a second lien ae its. security. This
amount tic the tint 07 miles west, from Omaha is
only $l6, per mile. •
7th. The fact that the U. S. Government considers a.
second lien upon the road a good Investment., and that
some of. the shrewdest railroad builders of the country
have already paid in five million.dollars upon the stock
(which is to them a third lien), may well inspire coo=
deuce in a first lien. • _ -.-
Bth. Although it is not claimed
-that there Can be any
better sect:ides thin Governments, there are parties
who consider a drat-mortgage upon such a property as
this the very best isecutity in the world, and who sell
their Governments to • re•inveat in these bonds—thus
securing a greater interest.
9th. As the Union Pacific Railroad bonds are Offered
for the present at 96 cents on the dollar and accrued
Wrest, they are the cheapest security. in the market,'
being more than 15 per cent. less that U.S.Stocks.-
leth. At the current rate of premium on gold, they
PRY •
Over Nine 'per Cent Interest.
. The•dally euhscriptions are 'already larie, and they
will continue to be received In New:York by the
CONTINENTAL. NATIONAL Balm, No. 7 Nassau St,
CLARE, DODGE & co., Tiarmass, No. St Wall St.,
Jorcii J. Cisco 85 SON, BAN - km, No., 33 Wall St.,
and by BANES AND BANILLItS. generally through::
- out the 'United States, of whoin maps -.and descriptive
Pamphletemay be obtained. -They will also be sent by
mall from the Company's Office, No. 20 Nassau Street,
New York,on application.. Subscribers will select their
Own Agente'fn whom they have confidence, who alone
will be responsible to them for the safe delivery of the
bonds. • .
JOHN J. CISCO, Treas.,
June 8, 'GT. 23-3 m. NEW YOBIK
'la the Illpribeg eloutho, the opt= naturally
undergoes a change, and RELIABOLD'B HIGIILY COaota•
MATZO EXTRACT or SARSAPARILLA 18 an assistant of
the greatest value. June 8, ,137-13-43nt
9 Cent. a yard.
750 Yards MULCT
NEW . STEAM SAUSAGE MACHINE,
10 Gents a Yard.
1900 Ws. 1111991i9
No, 301 Centre Street, POTTSVILLE,
V.: I I"POSITE TUX OLD TOWN
„ .
Heturnstiutuks to his numerous customers for their lib
eral ein the past, and solicits a continuance
of ffie same.' .
• He has enlarged his operations by the introduction
into histustuess of anew steam sausage machine.—
He will continue to keep on hand the best quality of
bleat, Hams Hattsages,' &c. ` - '
' es his facilities for ' making sausage , are much in
creased by Me use ofthe steam machine, ba • is. pre
- pared to make snags to order,promptly and expo
ditiously: -
To - dealers. who purchase sausage by Wholesale; a
liberal discount bomstde.
Pottevllle,'duly 27,067
- - -
A lE CTB. A YARD,
- I
1000 '
at 13 . a yard.
20,000 "Y? Yuslin
Comprising al the flia eat
and best' a dard
grades. fro •16
to 25 auk .
, •
yaid wide.)
'DS NIUSLEI
44, 6-4, 64, . wide.
150 Y'ds Prints
F Ai iim,-A.ti-k!-4:
OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS. .
On Iligind iii . filleinuOurnurers Prices.
August • • 31itt
at I.oclis a yard.
1600 Zig PRINT 4
IAtI2X MI A YARD.
p.R4Nons - sxTER.B l C 311011109.
Equal to .00.:Pointingo.
.
- Consisting of th e Group cd4rtails, Little Chickens,
Duckling's Victory, Winter Crowned Wren; Ruby"
Wreo,liper and:NaCntekram., the Awakening. .
lOW Gems 61 Art. Can and see them_ at •
t • 4; • , ItANNAN RAMEOMi,Sookstore.'
Sp;aidld goods,
I_,FalAtrekbiro:
2 Cases, PRINTS
`isms. A raze:
1 Cas'ePRINTS
Those who Desire-Brilliancy of Cons!!
lesiow Janst.. , pnrify and, enrich. tbe. blood, WhiCh
uu Lira CO,NOZNTRATED EXTIth:CT Or BARasPARO.I.4
brariably does... A4llr. for.Eletutbold , s: Takcnia'othia:
tone &. '67 ',''" ,t 2676iri
D...
- . • -.-41folnetipaable 'Pitjarietata,
'Hu located at thienlace: Office at Mns.-Jones`l7orttp;
'west cornet sth" and Market streets, Pottsville; Pa..
COMCI3 boats, 7to M., and 2'end 7to 9, M
Wean be - consulted In - German; •
• August 10.'87_
I easellerrinu,tokil
13 Ots. nYardi:
CASE
gftian Prints,
OlrfiY 18 Cents,
.nitENT Or
W 011tDIRAPCCE in Felation to Lfeealt.
zn. sea . fisr:Pinplic Exhibition. de Circuses.
Be it ordained and. enacted by the Town Cotmcil of
the Borongliof Pottsville, and it is, hereby ,enacted by
the autho ty of the same,
Bacrrtizi That all public exhlbitioms (excepting
'natural curiosities) shall pay hi the Mel DuMete
the use of the Borough, a summot - less thmi One nor
more than
,T,wenoty-iive Dollars, except clicuses4
which shall pay not lets than Tidily nor more than,
Fifty Do ll ars !sr each dart exhlbltion.
Sscrrion 2. That VI ordtztances In aniflict With the
vtovielana of this ordinate, be and same am here.
y repealed. • • • • i
and passed Into an'ordlinince Pottsville;
this 6th day of August, A. D., one thousand eight bun:.
dred and Vxty.seyen.
• ' ' SAMUEL FliaPirrißß, PresidenL.
• , Attest :A. Wilmot:, Town Clerk.
AngVer 10 , " • 82"..
Alots of Hat Bail Bead Itratt, i3sfikand
trg -for see,etleN l / 2 _;; -1 1 . : BRIGHT. CO.
1faX 2 ;4.17,,,
, .
akailit ' ntia• -i fir: Pallia.thikee, and boat-build
era' material* and.totaa get:milli,. at lowest man
tillictareatariaaa, at . .BRIGHT dr CO'S.
June . . 43
-ir — 41 : 111101 T ' T Plll ' SO' - ,71A - clreta of admission to
' A••- 1 the County Ptlacii,'wM hereafter be howl on the
add. mcrurgt.. WICOMISDAYS .of. each
AC repacoul tatehttg to,tott the rtson. shonla ap ;
' on *the. islicheta will not be given tabby
0..... pm, I: "; ' AWN lIVICErf,}-
'GEORGE WILSON; Commla , ere. ,
• • - •
BerhtIIDWANDIC
4: KEtNEL
L 7iir. Pelt , . - . • '
- ,-,mirra . Oak*, YoMfute. Ag. 8, VT. 2rn3l 2.
Jtsll - 'N BINDLE Y.
TAM.Comxvroic. -
Will celled cleft& of alf , lands ivlih pronpUtude,and ,
pea be ems et tbeiltdon Efatel ad iredneede* and;
Jaly
Baterdsy_evenings of each week,' team 6 to 8 o'olodi.
'AL '6T 80-262* -
(4EORGE • 'BERNET, •
-.• EPHOLSTERER - - -
ItpuLA.4' eilltreey lid de Tlairal,
Waal aIIIIOTMee i 0" the ' public t h at he 11118 taken the
store room mat :door,Ja Mr—Amt.' Arum:lWe old
stand, yhere El business thlde End will be promptly
•edto. , .][arch 25, ..6T-42.4S . •
enittioorit
sa H a te i rtrA e litlctll3z,trite , t Sat.-
P p; .pi s t ie*99 "; 74 0 1 CSR rtu..42a* per'
T II E
AS AN INVESTMENT.
JACOB '171.111E8, Butcher,
B T: &:.0 o . ,
AGOUTIS FOR
EMI=
s
a~c~pt:
TM: LATEST NEWS,
Saturday, August 31, 1367.
Tie Dia!cultism of Joiners and His Cab
heat..Tie Empreia Carlotta•lniarerling
MimeHaar.
A Washington correspondent of -the Phila
delphia Press telegraphs under date of
.Au
gut 29, as follows : - •
't is not Improbable that the threatened
timed disruption of the-Cabinet Will not occur,
as It is asserted that a 'majority of the mem
bers, Including - Secretary Seward, have made
up their minds to remain at all hazards, lt.
ls certain, however, that Mr.'Sewerd did in
tend to leave, and all of the Cabinet were In
the same 'box.
' "The promulgation of the Hancock order
occurred this morning, as I predicted in these
despatches last night, and thereby the conflict
between peneral Grant and Mr. Johnson is
for the present suspended, to be renewed,
however, in'a few days, undoubtedly, by the
removal of General Pope.
"The situation of political affairs. to-night
Is much calmer, as the excitement regarding
the removel:of Southern - miliet*?*comman
derkhas abated, on account of the temporary
halt in,the made attempts of_ the President to
brined° reconstruction, '
The Em re ing Carlotta, according to the
latest- Intel! Ce from Europe, " it is hoped
may be cu . The celebrated Belgian phy.
sician;* Di. Bulkens, has been - called to pro
nounce an opinionlipon her ease; and after .a
careful study of it he stated that he had
hopes "of a slow_but certain cure, if he were
allowed teaubject the illustrious patient to a
systemof treatment different, from that hith
erto adopted, and- especially to discontinue -
the state of complete isolation in which the
German physicians' have . keptaher:
The . Republican Philadelphia City and
Couny - Convention on - Thursday nominated
David Jones for City Treasurer, Richard 3L
Bettors for Clerk of the Orphans' Court, and
Benjamin F. Urwiler for City Commissioner. ,
George -W. Winnemore was executed at
the county prison in Philadelphia on Thurs
day for the murder:of Mrs. Dorcas Magilion
in Aprillast. On the scaffold he made a
short speech, asserting his innocence of the
crime for which he had been condemned.
The National Intelligencer of Thursday
states, -"by authority," that the reports of
any personal differences between the Presi- -
'dent and Gen. Grant are unfounded.
General Grant on Thursday issued the
President's order relieving General Sheridan
from, and assigning General Hancock to. the
command of the Fifth Military District, Gen
eral Sheridan is directed to proceed without
delay to *Fort Leavenworth. •
Prussia was, doing honors on - Thursday to
Bancroft, and Russia to Farragut.
General Pope has suspended the Albany
(Ga.) News on a chargeof disloyalty.
Louis Napoleon is individually in debt some
six millions of francs.'
The Coflan insurgents still hold out in the
mountains.' -
There was very little disposition to opera's
in stocks, in Philadelphia - on Thursday, but
prices were rather firmer. In flour there
was more doing. Wheat, rye, corn and oats
were unchanged. ,
:IN 10 14 . 13 I A PO 6 n 3 NI NIA
. .
. .
—:0:
• .
Corrected Weekly for the Miners , Journal
Wheat Flour, eitra family, per barrel..
do •do 'do do per cwt.'...
•' do do extra per :barrel.
Ry d e o not d ir a . superfine,' , go o -
do , per cwt...
Buckwheat Flour; do .
Wheat, prime white per bushel
do do red- ' *. do
Dried - Peaches, pored,' - Pe Pound.
•dy ..do - unoaren do
Dried Apples, .. ^ ' do ,
Rye, V be,
Oate,
Soup beans"
Pea!, .* "
Ryo Chop, ••
Com Meal "
Middlings, "
Potatoes, "
Hay, V ton.
" bale cwt
Straw, V ton.
Plaster,
Salt, V sack.
Tim Sol, b..
Clover `"
JUNE, JULY & AUGUST
E. F. WHITNEY, BANKER,
CENTRE STREET, POTTSVILLE.
Mardi D,-,tiT
L. F. WHITNEY,
OENTRE STREET, POTTSVILLE,
'AMERICAN' AND FOREHIN
GOLD AND SILVER,
Foreign Exchange,
Vatted States Bonds,
MONEY RECEIVED' ON DEPOSIT.- -
INTEREST allowed ha per special agreement.
STOCKS and BONDS bought and sold at
the New York and Philadelphia Boards of
Brokers at the usual Commission,
Ivan 1, V.
NATIONAL BANK.
offers for sate al lowest market rate
GOVERMENT SECURITIES!
11. 6._7.30 Treas. Notes date of lug.
ft if •Of J une 15, 'B5
if. - if July 15,'85 .
5-20 Loan of 1862.
5-20 Loan of 1E164.
- 5-20 Loan of 1565. •
• 10-40 Loan, of 1864.
GOLD, STOCKS AND BONDS
GOVERNMENT GEOUBITIEB BOUGHT
AND BOLD.'
- DRAFTS. _
On_ England, Ireland, prance and Germany, foilla In
emu to nit purchasere.
H. H. HITSTEDTGER, Cashier.
'Pottsville, January S. '36 I.tf
mm*o . v.An.
°apt, 0, F, GLOVER
SCALES.
Having removed his Clips! , and Tobacco Alvaro to
the building between Capt. Smith's cldthing store and
J. Duerrs Jewelry store, Centre' street, west side, and
tankful to his friends and the public for putt favors,
asks a continuance of the same, and informs them that
he has on hand a large and superior stock of all goods
in his line which will be sold at the lowest market
rates. •
store is easily distinguished by a large and
'beautiful model of "a salp in his window.
' - 1.5-tf
ng artair to -
-
Sept 15, .66-37-ly
muniaitEss,
AIL•
•AWATOMES, -
CILOOPCB,
.. and JEWELRY,
aTAri kinds Of linsicallnetraments, Vtoiin Stingy"
Bam Viog Strings, - Chitar and Banjo Strings, constantly
on tin& Jan So: tJ .
• ' - _YessaglLedies .13evinre -
Of the Isejoirions Effects of Fax " powders and
Washes. All such remedins close up the Pores of the
akin, and to a short time destroy the comaleilon. If
youwould have a fresh. healthy and youthful, appear
mice, vse MIZZEOLD'S Eassa.crr eaws•ssicur.
:I). A.. SMIT H,::;;:::
MERCHANT TAILOR.
egiaßll ST., POTTSVALE, PAI
April 1,16 " 14-tr '
'.:H. K W. EST.O N 9
AGENT. FOB THE SALE OF
LUBRICATING OIL: T"RAILS, - BURET IRON,
BALED RAY. WIRE BOPB, /Cc. Oilice Centre Bt..
ikl &mar Boliding—entranos next door to
Masonic Hell:, 3nly IC, .GI-28-23in•
Yatex Coolers, beaatital inddarabie, All sizes:
' - st'BRIGIIT CO% Pottsville.
nits t Ouse Ails ::-X,4A.; Whale; Lird,. 13pe-'s
Imbricating., All prices and kinds.' eille.
23. •• - BRIGHT & pat&
. -.:4LTea fa
—The finest
.., thing forctra
.
:cracker..—Just hco. O. BEcx.
x.A.. peptic&
T. Tea
.n. town.
Queimr Cured
Astrete alved..
Beef
iIIOWDZIEM Br,- ;of Beef for j n C l ( l j. ' 1 '9 11 "
SIM% &C. '
BRICKS.
^ - w • t).li SALE CHEAP.
.dLL & PLETCHER, ReaOisi, Pa
August 17. - 061. 93 lm
'sl2 50
6 25
10 55
20
7 75
3 75
4 00
2101
2 SO,
$1 50 1 1Iggs, '
1 3&l3utter, 39 T. '22 •
851Cbenze, " .2.0
3 000 Lard, '• 10,
-• 4 001112 ms, . 1 22
612iShoolders,
I,4olBeef hind qr. "112 .
901 " front 11 "
•10,
. .90rItIntton,
20 00iPork, "120
1 2n , Veal,, " 12
1 50iSngar, Cnba, "
• • • Sugar Howe,' :
3 50 1 Porto Bin°, ", -
11Vidte,
Crumbed. .`
N. Q. Syrup. "
7-30's
CONVERTED INTO
5-2 Q's.
BANKER,
Denier in
Quartermaster's VouChers
And Uneurrent Money.
GOVERNMENT
ITE=Cill
AND ALL
WIRE ROPE.
tuber:Them! agentir for
SOCK, BIBBY & CO. , S
;rated Steel wand . Charcoal
Rope. for Mines . Inclined
r Bridges, Derricks, and
,
parpoees. Also Oat -
, :edSharcoal and B. B. Ropc
Rape Standing Rigging,
a, Goys &c. • - 1
tarp; constantly on
Orders Med with Als..
For farther particulars
price, test, weight , and
working !train; appl to 3iln-
JOMK W. MASON t CO., -
i 3 Broadway, N. Y.
ALWAYS ON RAND
Beef and Tiligues„
SNO. 0. R&M
APPIY to
Xll 50
G 75
11 25
1 50
S 50
4 25
4 50
2CI
S 40