The miners' journal, and Pottsville general advertiser. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1837-1869, September 14, 1867, Image 1

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    isEntil or THE METERIP4OI7.IiNdiii.
• T 103413-82 73 per annum, mil:it° in edam
-93 00 it not paid in advance.: - -
There Leans will be etricilptclitesed to hereafter.
amiss:
Three eOptee to One addle . " Cbleit t enee) 87. 00
Six . " - ;, • 12 00
Fifteen • - 30 00
(q u b saberr . iptiona mast (rivulet' The paid In advance.
The .forasr.r. will be furnished to Carriensandothers
;1.4 00 per 100 copies. cash on delivery.:.
1r" acrpmfmen and School treetetiers.will be furnieh
ed v ith the Jotinnia..at $1 he In inhume, or $f To if
paid within the year—over one year call rates, -
HATER 0 , ADTERTISIUTiG 3
For 3 lines, including date, one hiseriltM.llscta., and
Ihsequent insertions 25 cents. One square of T lines,
ald over 3 lines, for 1 or :I 'insertions $1: 8 insertions
$1 25; subsequent insertions,ls cents per tiquars.—
Larger noes in ImPtirtioll.* -• • , .
worrrus—orWo. I. ava
.tr a ree lines. with •dates. $l3O $2 00 43.50 sa oo
se gen lines, and .over 3. 11 4-00 700 • 12 00
Two squares, Or 141ines, 500 600 1000 18 00
Three - `• ".21, •n 7
00 ..800 .14 00 .20 00
Lines o
ver asquare.. 17 cents a line.' Special Notl.
cm 15 per cent higher. . Local Notieea, 20 cents aline,.
One Inch space is equal to twelve lines.
Lager Advertisements as per agreement
little words constitute a line. • • • • .
.
prThe circulation of the Joustisat.ll !Mt exceeded
by any paper published In the State out of Philadelphia
ns Pittsburg. and it is usyw the largest sheet published
In Pennsylvania. • • . •
Within the last Ave years the isubscription list was
doubled. an mediumnues to increase rapidly. As an
Advertisingit is one- of the beat in the State.
IL; 0- PAR TIV E RIMS - tin de r
sinned have formed a - Co-partnershlp as At
torneye at Law, under the name of HANNAN & SON.
• . JOHNHANNAN,
Pottsville, Peb 6,-1861 .- 6: .'THOS . Et. HANNAN..
AW. MC IMA_L K, Attorney at Law. •
. OFFICE:-Centre St., belos Rinses@ Mee.
Can he consulted In German. - -April T. IT-14-6m
TORN' W. nrug.EL. .• • • •• .
• Attorney nt Law, Pottsville; Pa.
(Mee with. Hon. F. W. Hughey, Centre etreetj
Can be'consulted In Englith end German.
Dec 15,- '66 • .50-11•
BENIA2LEN B. incCOOL, Atiansey at
Law:- OFFICE--.llabantongo Street above
Centre. Ma5ch19..64.-12-tf •
CLAY BEROSTRESPEIt, •
xx• • Attorney at Law,
Jushland, Schuylkill County, Pa. Office—On Centre
street, oppoolte
Sept. 24;,64. the Poet Office. .
• •
T it Ak . loll WEIDMAN , . •.-.• , • . •
.-Attortley at Law, • • •
07PION :—Ceritee StreSt, rooms formerly occupied by
George De/3. Heim March 30. 411-12.47.
—.... . .
. .
CaIPIPHELL & S MlTEl,Attorney• at
Law. • OFFlCE—Centre Street, opposite ' White
.
Horse Hotel, Pottaville, Pa.
.
June 28, 'GS
OIIERISTOPIIEIC LITTLE,
V Attorney at Law, and Notary Public,
(Authorized by Law to administer affidavits, &c.
and .to take depositions, and' acknowledgments o
deeds, mortgagee. powers - of Attorney, ac.,)
• POTTSVILLE. SCHUYLKILL CO.. PA., •
LAW AND COLLECTION OFFICE. •
Mabantcngo St. (opposite Poet =mi x
July 15, NIS.
J. W. BOMEBERRII, -Attoraer
at-Law, has removed hie office to the
second door, front room, above .B. 'Hannan% 'Book
store, on Centre St. PattsvUle, Febl4, 10T-4-
T H E
WASHINGTON LIBKRY CO,
PIIILLDELPHIA,
SUBSCRIPTION ONt DOLLAR. -
$300,000
PRESENTS TO SUBSCRIBERS
. .
One Cash Preuent
One' Cash Present of 820,000.
One Cash Present of 810,000..
.One Cash Present of 83.000. .
Two Cash Presents of $2,500 ench.
Bead ull. Schedule of Presents BelOto. '-
Each Certhlcatea Stock Is accompanied with a .
BEAUTIFUL - STEEL-PLATE ENGRAVING,
WORTH - MORE AT RETAIL THAN TEE COST OF
-clrrancATß, • •
And also Manic' to the holder a . •• . •
PRESENT' IN THE GREAT PISTRLBII ON. •
THE•WASIIINGTON: LIBRARY
18 cbartered by the Stele of Pennsylvalds, and Organ
• • !zed in aid of the '
RIVMISIDE..INSTITUTE
Soldiers , and Sailors) Orphans,
Incorporated by the State of N. J. AprllB, '67
TUE RIVERSIDE INSTITUTE,
. .
Situate Lt Riverside„BurlingtOn County, New Jersey,.
is founded far the' ptirtioae of gratuitously educating
the s9rai deceased Soldiery and Semen of the Cult-
The Donal of Trustees consists or the.' following
weliknoWn citizens of Pennsylvania and New Jersey:
Dos,. WM.. B. MANN, District , •Attorney -Philadvi
.
phla, Pa.
IiON. LEWIS R .13ROOMALL • Ex.:Chief Coiner 11..
S. Mint,•and Recorder of Deeds. Philadelphia, Pa ... •
• Rms. JAMES M. SCOVELL, New. Jersey.. '-
11o , s. W. W. WARS, New Jersey:.
' 'HENRY GORMAN, Esq., Agent Adams' Express,
Philadelphia, Pa. • -- • .
E. COE, .11.1, of Joy, Coe & Co., Philadelphia.
DF.rAZTIIENT. WAMINGTON, D. C., April
IS. IS6 .—Office of Internal' Revenue:—Having re
ceived Fatigactoryc evldence that the proceeds of the-_
entermise c mducted by the '•Waehtogt'n' Library
Company , . will be devoted to' charitable uses, permis
sion la hereby granted to Pahl Company to conduct
ench enterprise exempt from all charge, whether from
special tax:or other duty.
E. A: ROLUNS, Commlseloner
.
.
.The Washing ton Library Company,
.
In order that the :benevolent _()hint set forth in this
circular, may be Faccesefally accomplished, -Issued five
series of - '
" FINE STEEL-PLATS - gN(IgAVINGS,
Which are put up on subscription . at prices pub below
their retail "value.
CERTIFICATES OF STOCK IN TIIE WASHING
TON LIBRA.SiT COMPANY
Will he leaned, stamped witb the seal of the Company;
end signed by the Secretary, .(None others genuine )
Any person sending us ONE DOLLAR, or paying
the same to our local Agents, will receive immediately
a fine Steel Piste langraving. at cholcd from the fol
lowing list. and One Certificate of Stock, 'mining One
Present in oar published schedule.•
ONE DOLLAR IiNGRAyEgG9
F No. Child I lfy Child!" No. 2-" They're
Saved l They're Saved!" - • No. 3—“ Old Seventy-six:
or, 'the Early Days of the Revolution."
Any person paying TWO DOLLARS will receive
.eithcrof the following fine Steel Plates, at choice, and
Two Certificates of Stock, thus becoming entitled to
Two Presents.
TWO DOLLAR ENGRAVINGS.
No. I—"Washitigton's Courtship " 9.
ingtOn's La.st Interview with his Mother."
THREE DOLLAR ENGRAVINGS.
Any person paying THREE DOLLARS will receive
the beautiful Steel Plate of
_
• !'HOME FROM THE WAR,' O - •
and Three Certificatee of Stock, becoming entitled to
Three Presenta.
FORA DOLLAR 'RNGRANINGS
Ary person.paying FOUR DOLLARS shall*receive
the large and beautiful Steel ?late of •
' "TILE PERILS OF OUR FOREFATHERS,".
end Four Certificates of Stock, entitling them to Four
Presents.
YIPS DOLLAR ENGRAVINGS
-Acy person who pays FIVE DOLLARS shall receive
the large and splendid Steel Plate of
. "TUE MARRIAGE OF FOCAIIGINTTAS,.'
end Five Certificates of Stotk, : entitling them to Five
Preeente..
The Engravings aid Certificates will be. delivered to
each subscriber at our Local Agencies, or sent by-mail,
post paid, or express, as may be ordered. '
The Washington Library Company
.WILL AWARD
THREE HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS
IN PRESENTS
TO THE SHAREHOLDERS,
On. Wednesday, September 26th, '67
AT PIIIt.ADELPIILL, PA.,
OEAT TILE INSTITUTE RIVERSIDE, N. J.
- SCIIIiEDULE OF •PRICES,
•
1 Cash Present
1 Cash Present- -
1 Casa Present
1 Cash Present
2-Cash Presents of s2soo each
1 Ilandsotn. Country Residence,.. Stable,
Grounds...to , Germantown, Philada...... 1%000
-.1 Double Residence, three-story brick,
- den; N J • . •
1 Coal Depot, Offices,- Sheds, Grounds, with
. business established, N0..151-1 Washington
Avenue, Philada • '
1 Country Residence. Riverside, N. J., with
Ground, Fruits. Sc
1 Three-story Cottage, Int,..ine
25 Valuable Building Lots, Riverside, $3OO .
each
i Elegant Turnout Family Carriage, Span of
Horses; Harness, &-c. complete 64000
10 Valuable Balkihag LotA 'Riverside, $3OO
each
.3,000
1 Beautiful Silver-gray Horse, 15,V bands
• high, sired by the celebrated imported
• Arabian horse "Caliph;" also, a tight Road
Wagon, weight. 140 pounds, with net of
- . superior Single. Harness, wishing 'a
first class establishment •
20 Pianos, $5OO each
20 Melodeons. $225 each -.. •
5 Rosewood Sewing Machines,, VOO each. - ....
10 Family Sewing Machines, $lOO each
50 Fine Gold Watchee, $2OO each •
100 011 Paintings, by leading artists—aggregate
.value
Camel's HairShasile, $l,OOO-each
2 Camel's Hair Shawls, $3,000 each
• 9 Handsome Lace Shawls, $l5O
10 Cashmere Shawls, on each
20 Silk Dress Patterns, $l5 each •
DO City Building Lots, 11.15 each
The remainder will consist of Silverware,
Musical Botes,Opera Glasses, Pocket 131-
-hies, and different articles of ornament and
use, amounting to 82,003
• Total ' • •' • 006,090
All the properties given dear of triertmhrattee ' •' -
BOW TO OBTAIN SHARES AND EN-
GRAVINGS
Send orders to as by mail, enclosing from s*,
either by Post Office orders or in a registered letter; at
our risk. Larger amounts should be, sent bytiratt or
express.
10 shares with Engravings.
25 shares with . Engravings.
60 shares with Engravings...
75 shares with Engravings.
100 Shang with Engravings
Local AGENTS WANTED thionghout tie 13niteA
-
' The Association have appointed as Receivers.
Itesars. GEO. A. COOKS & CO.: whose well known
Integrity and buelneas experience Will be a kinkiest
guarantee that the money intrusted to them will be
promptly applied to the purposes stated. •
PKILADICLPIIIA. Ps.„.May 96, 1967: .
To the Odkers and Members of the :Washington Li:
brasy Co., N. S. READ, Secretary. • • .
'Gentlemen -receipt of.your favor of the ltith
that., notifying as of our appointment as Receivers for
your Company, we took the liberty to 'submit a copy
ofyour charter, with a plan of your entemise, to the
highest legal authority of the State, and haSingre
m4ved his favorabbs opinion in mgar&'to Ila legality,
and sympathizing with the .benevolent °tied's"! your
Association, viz :. the education and. maintenance of
the capban children of oar Bobber* and sallom at the
.Riverside Institute: we have concluded.to accent ,the
treat, and' use our best efforts to promote so worthy an
object.- ,' Respectfully, yours, &c,
GRO. A. COOKE & CO. . -
- Address all letters and orders to •
GEO. A. COOKS & CO., BANKERS; •
• - St South Third 81, l'hilada, Pa.;
Receivers for , the Washington. Library Co. . •
' June ea, 067 . . . 26_Gm
rIAPEJI SAGA AND TVBAPPIND
PAPDS.
Having completed arrangements withmanufaetnreis
of above, lam now lager to the tzeite, at the lowest
market rates:—
No. I, Manilht 13 . age, Xto BO IDs , fall size. • _
No. 2,
wrapping . m 10
. 64 44
Philadelphia &ea ,tt 25
.
BAGS. PRINTED TO ORDER. • : •
No. 1 4 Manilla Paper 24x26-20 le. per. ream.
• . 0 24x36-95 •'
No. 2j .. .341:31=30 as• ...
Wrapping 2.4.:25z40 " " -
,
•, . 64 84x40-.60 46
Ginn • " 24256 - 0 "- "
Straw Paper, '14116 . •
Gold leaf Paper, 121.16 . .
. 14.a18 • . . .
" 14x18
15x20
" .18x28. : • ;
I wonla ousteetrany solicit a ettareof the
patronage
ofmeretnuna and others. Seed for Mt
W.. LAUDE J. :.,
:Sad Jaw , am. bat WFtiq alsta rik ru
OM
No. 4, ..
t.,;;T7.11"_,
. ' ",_ " .-.:," • ~,..,- .. •
....•
~_„ , ...•••••••••••.....www..mmmr
... . . .
..
... _._.____
Pur.sus-..tvip.-.:'.-y.AT:',,'$A-TIT:p417:::-.),otsrrti%to-.1).y.,:i4N*--70k:;..,:41p.,gy4::::R.911.:rtpyu.44.-_;::.-s..oft_py,T4,Kg.,-L.-:--cp#NNs-vtiviNI.A.'
37.
MISCELLANEOUS.
RESTORE • YOUR . • SIGHT I
STEPHENS &.• CO.'S‘.
DPATENT COSH E l RESTORris,
Or. RESTORERS OF THE . EYESIGHT.
IVY Min iimiare impaired Siidd, avi4.p resern
it to the Latest Patn a of 4 . 11 . e . ,. •
spEarAczas IlEsiD=2:Jo °muss.
•
• • . • -
- The most .emituent Physic
/. -7.; . -: . -r-g . fans. Ocultats,"' Divines, and
/
4 . - . ; .:l''' the most prominent men •of
::' •.. ..-1 1' oaf col:Wry. recommend the
~,- f 4,. , 'use of the CORNEAMESTOItz
tt.- • - '-. ETIS for Presbycipia, or ray or
" - • L'ong - Stliteduess. 'or • every
person who 'wears Apictsclett•
from age ; Dimness of Via
ion, or Blurring ; Overworked
Eyes ; Asthenopia, 'or Weak
Eyes ; Epiphora, or Watery
Eyes ; Pain in the Eyeball ;
•Amauxosts. or -Obscurity of.
. Vision '• PliotOphobia, or;
In
toleranceof _Light ;.Weakness
of the Edina and Optic Nerve;
Myodesppia, or . . Speclut or
Moving bodies' before • the
Eyes ; OPhtbalmisi or Indkra,
station of the Eye, and Eye.
lids ; • Cataract. Eyes'; Hemlo•
1 pia, or Partial -- Elindnesa ;
Sinkirg of the Eyeball; and
Imperfect .Vision ' from the
• effects of . *Xallaautution, &c.. -,
.
The, iced by any one with a certainty
of aucces.., without the liast fear of injurY to,
the eye. More than 5,000 certincstes of cures are
exhibited at our office. Cure guaranteed in every
ease when applied • according. to' the directions
. inclosed ..in each box, or the money will be re
funded- ' Write for a Circular—rent gratis: .
Address, - Dr. .1 . : STEPHENS .
&CO. Oculists, 1.:
1P O. Box 926 , J . .
.. • ... -
For . aale at Rualaton's Family Drug Store, No.
10 Asta Baum), - corner. of Barclay Street. and
Broadway, Now York.
. •
/kr . J.• Srrermvs & Co. bare invented
and patented a MYOPIA' or CORNEA -.FLAT
TENER, for the cure of NEARSIGHTEDNESS,
winch ha.i proved ► great success.- Write for ■
Nov 14, '66 - • 4T-iy
PORT . • OA APE . . WINE !
- ....
PUBS AND. ro . oit 'YEARS •OLD.': : , -
For the Communion Table and. Family Fie.
PRESCRIBED BY PRYSTC7A2iB FOR
Female,
Weakly Persons,
The - Great Remedy . for Kidpey Affections
RHEItMATIAT,
AND ALL CHRONIC DISEASES.
Every family at this season should use
•
Speer's Port Grape Wine,
•.- • .
Celeb4ted in Ear* for its medicinal and beneficial
qualities: highly esteemed by, eminent- physicians,
maul; in European and. Amen= Hospitals, and_ by
some of the — best families in Europe and America.
AS A TONIC—It bas no equal, ceasing an appetite
and building up the system, being eatirely-a pure wine
of a most valuable grape • .
AS A DIHRETIC-It imparts mil thy at tion of the
glands, kidneys and urinary organs: very beneficial in
dropsy, goat and rheumatic affecticaus. :
Speer's Port Grape Wine
Li a are article from the Juice of the Port Grape, Pots
semlng medicinal propertiessuperior to any ether wine
in use, and an excellent article for all weak and debili,
tabsd persons, and the aged and intbm,lmproving the
appetite, and benefit:lug - ladies and children. '
Try it once, and you will not be deceived. •
• cat - Ile- sere the signature of .ALFRED SPEER ter
over the cork of each bottle. ' • •
• Sold by H. Saylor, Pottsville; Shindel & Bond;Va.
magus; - Hemuiny & 3fahanoy City; Lawrence
& Brown, Minetsvllle; H. N. CoxO, Schuylkill Haven;
H. B. Davis. St. Clair, and by all first clays druptists;
who also sell the CASTRUA PORT .BIL&N.B1r, a
choice old article, Imported - only -by Mr. Speer, direct
from the Valley of Oporto. .• • .
Trade Supplied by wholesale druggists in * New . York
and Philadelphia, and by A. SPREH, at . his Vineyard
to Nevi Jersey. . -
PRINCIPAL OFFICE-209 laropi.dw.ny,'N: Y.
May 12, , G - _ • . 19-Iy.
Win. a. sovan,
WHOLRSALE AND RETAIL' DEALER .fl
TOBACCO,.PIPES & .SEIGAIES,
Centre St., Oppoiaitetite Town
POTTSVILLE, .PA.
Feb 41, .ISI
REMINGTONS
111 FIRE ARMS.
Sold by Gton. Dealers
AND • THE TRADE . GENERALLY.
Vest Pocket Pistol, No. 22 Cartridge.
Reiciating Pistol. (Elliot pt.) No. 22 Cartridge!
. Poi•
Repeat
ring
Revolver Pistol,
(Self C , (Elliot
ocking pt,) No ). .$ 2 Cartridge.
Vc. • •
Ne*PoCket Revolver, (with Loading Lever).
Police Revolver, Navy Size Calibre. - •••
Belt Revolver, (Self-Cocking.) Navy Calibre.':'
'Navy Revolver. 36-100 in. Calibre. . •
Army Revolver, 44400 in. Calibre. . • -
Gun Cane, using N 0.32 Cartridge. • •
Revolving Rine, 36 & 44-100 in: Calibre.-
Breech Loading Rifle,.No. 32 Cartridge.* : •-
• •
Breech, Loading Carbine, No. 46 Cartridge.; .
U. S. ifle, Rifle Barrel,) with Sabre Bayonet...,
8. Rifled Musket, Springfield Pattern.. • • .
Burgle Barrel Shot Gun. • .
E.:REMINGTON & SONS, Ilion, New York,
Agent.
Moore & Nichols, New York. • .
Painters dr, Bachelders, Easton._ .-• '• • -.
Jobn P. Lovell, Boston. • -.
Joe C. Grubb St Co., Philadelphia. •
Poultn4 R Trimble, Baltimore.. • •
_.•
Henry Folsom Co., New Orleans and memplgs. -
Maynard Bros:; Chicago. • _
L. hi Rumsey & Co., St: Louis. • '
AlbertE. Crime, San Prantisco. • •
Aug: :13, 'O6 ' • . (4p. 1, '6B-14) • . 83- .
$40,000
20,000
10,000
0,000
5,C00
OA - ONCE STOCK OF BOOTS. AND
NJ, 15H0814.--The undersigned respectfully in
forms the citizens of ,
Pottsville and vicinity, ;
that he Lae op hand a • II) . '
large,•and fine assort-
ment of Men's, Boy's, •
Women's, Misses and 7 4 01,1 14 .1111 ,- -
Children"s Boots . and _
Shoes, - which he Is sel- Neb
ling at as reasonable „", .0 1
prices as they can be •••/ -
procured anywhere.
or - Work made to
order with promptness and despatch.
• J. F. E3IIII.ARDT,.
Mahantoruto St., opposite Post OtSce, Pottsville. .
April 20, 'GT l6-6m
5,000
10,000
4.500
1,000
1,000
10,000
:sow
.2360
'.40 60
69 00
,sto
M
OVA._
Acknowledged to be the beet. LondonfillPin.
Prize Medal and high awards In Amerl- .1 .
ea received. Melodeons and second-band Pianos.
Warcrooms, 723 Arch street, below Elghtb. Ph!lade'.
phia. April 114 .67 1.5-16 m .
PLUMBING . AND GAS FITTING
ATTENDED .TO IN ALL THEIR . 1714NCH118.
sw-cnAlikincm 11/10DERA.T14412
Orders left'at the stores of DOSBYSNELL & BRO.,
and GEORGE • BKEtNET,. Centre - St., will reeeh-s
prompt attention.
pr• Old Brass, Comer mid Lead hove •
GEORGE N. DOWNING,:
• • Corner of Sixth and fictnirllFlll Amnia •
.POaW/M4 March & Asa - .
DB. W. K. LINEAWEAVEI4
DENTIST am '
Graduate of Penmtvarkla Comp or mental Surgery.)
Rooms :—llliarket Street ;above Third.
Nitrous 04de Gas, 'Ether and. Chloroform admin
wend wheat desired. _ dird 6, 47- 4 4 1 / •
Eitedmiwe IHoire mai
C l 4.lllLES • ll•lEllitp%
l• .
sulnrittortnuai or
SAIAAMANEiER 'SAVES, .
,second ISt., Pottsville
Announces to the beldame community of this g i
and the indloinipit cOnntles,that he manufac
tures HATAAMBR. of almsel and
kinds, wananted Flrd•proct which. in point of
workmanship and amen traipse with • throe 01
Mined from any.other detabliehnumt in the cottntry.--.
-He always keeps Wm on band for sale, and wilt- make
them myelin, for Banking and other Palle neon=
tlona, au dump; if not Owes ass asocial be obtained
He relent tbAltdeadialiarrand,f*mgeßilght,Thae.
Ooodi sad a, Essiorsoo t Of thls licario(a. Who hays
bfs MM L 4 POI
. .
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And Invalids.
FEMALES
w® tsio you to plane its Uri!' tlicisigh, ant Wig ;lit 'ins; Illatsseflik Issoldes Id* site '
IRON WORKS.
• MENA ri BOA' - IKON W OR.KIC—The
S-subscriber is now prepared to , bulld
Strata Etotnes,'Pumos, Coal Breakers
"is,
and Drift Cats. All kinds of 'castings „. "Mit iggtil
and . forgings male to order. ny.;
Attention paid .to tbs . manufacture of
CarWbeets: —3011 N. 6A.TIZIEBEL• .
..flltemindoah 1, - '- - 14-1* -
`CO.THE' .IL
.LTO 7- 11.1201q O are
premired to furnish If RAILROAD TRON,-4el
tug from 20 to TO pounds per yard—mu:Err
from 18 to 68 pounds: per yard, tomtit r' .
-either for home care or ; locomotives.--
itlttheise rallear.= of the LATEST AND Lli4„lWgi
MOST APPROVED 'PATTERNS,—
Also a general assortment of IdERCIII
ANT BAR IRON; Minds, Plata. Squares, Oval; Hal(
Rnnnd and Grooved, MOO P AND BAND rrialki, CAR
AMLIN, RAILROAD CIIMRs. FISH 'PLATRS AND
BOOK SPIKES, for rails.. ' ROLLS 'made of the beet
brands of cold Blast charcoal iron; ready for use. eith
er-for T WU. street mile or bar iron.:.Also' ev kbada
of-CASTINGS FOR BOLLLNG MILLS. We also in- ,
vite attention to. our, ,DIFFERENT PATTICHNS OF
SIIRARS, for cubing old rails, paddled Iron. EC. &e.
MITA. HAYWOOD, President
Office corner 2d and Market Sta.; Pottsville, Pa.
Jan 26, 411 ,
POTTSVILLE ROLLING MILL,
it.TEINS BROTIMIS, Proprietors,
Pottsville, Schuylkill County. Penner:,
Manufactarers of Railroad Iron (toth. T and Street
Rails) are prepared to receive and exe
cute orders at short notice, for any and 1 , 16111111 i
all the ordinary sizes in use. . 1MP..1;4R
Making, our own pl.? metal, we-are t yy . .
,-
careful to select enitable ores ; buyers "4 4 .
can therefore rely upon receiving in all cases itrei, claw
rails. The smaller slum of T Rails, - 22, 25,18, 82,rand
40 pounds to the yard, always on hand, and supplied
in small iota as wanted., .
Pottsville, October , • -
.
- BALDWIN LOCOMOTIVE WORKS.
m. .11 A R:D . az. C 0110 A NN, Br e ed
• and Hamilton streets; Philadelpilia; Penna.,
Would call the attention of Erclimed
Alsevera, 'and those Interested in Rail= 1217 j
road Pro, to their system of Loco
motiveperty
Engines, in which they are adapt- "riAin anai
el to the particular business for which '
they may be by the use of one, twe, three or
four pair of driving '
wheels end the use of the whole,
or so much of the weight as may be • desirable for ad-.
hesion: - and accommodating them tci the grades,
curves, strengt of saperetruction, and rail and work
to be done.. B y these means the maximiim useful effect
of the power is secured with 'the least expense for at.
tend:lnce,. cost of Kiel; and repairs .to Road and Engine.
With these ohjecta in view, and as the result of twenty
three years paactical expeneiace ip the business by our
setifor. partner, we manufacture five' different kinds of
&ethics,' and several - classes of sizes 'of each kind.;-,
Particular attention paid. to the strength of the ma
chine in the plan and workmanship of AU the details.
Our king experience and opportunities of obtaining in
formation, enables us to offer these engines with the
assurance that in efficiency, economy and. durability,
they will compare favorably With th ose .of 'any other
kind in use.•. We also furnish to Orderi.wheele, axles,
bowling or low moor tire Gott centres without boring 4
composition castings for bearings of r every description
of Copper; Sheet iron and Boiler Works; and every ar
title appertaining to the repair or renewal of Locomo
tive Engines... .. • ••M BAIRD, .•
• r " .• -
OEO. BURNHAM,
Jan 1,..'00-141 . . CHAS. T. PARRY.- '
RAINY
' IRON , WORK S, _ILK CI Tl,Ce—•.The subscriber, having his works com,
pleted and in full OperatiOn, With heavy* „s "
machinery and tools of the .latest .ha-.
improvement, is now prepared to do all :i Mi
kinds ' of - mining machinery, steam en
glees of any size for hobtibg and pump- ` .
hig," single and double acting pumps of all sizes and of
the latest - improvement, Cornish engines of nny size for
pumping in slopes" or Plinfto. with Cornish putnp, all
kinds of coal breakers,-with chilled or plain teeth, all
kinds of wrought iron forgings for drift cars or mining:
machinery, blast furnaces of cold or hot Mist, with an
improved blowing cylinder and blast pipes, and rolling
mills with the-two or three high rolls. with the latest
improved furnaces il
for puddling or. heating, all 'kind-of
2410/ castings. for circular or upright -saws,.bruss
- .work of every description cast and finished, and "rail
road castings oral( sizes for' mines or railroad's - The
stibscriner having had a longexperiencein the machine
business iu this region, and a practical. mechanic, and
Weil known as one of:thelidellrin of Wren and Bros.,
of the Washington iron 'Works, Pottsville, trusts that
pfonipt attention to' business will procure for him the
patronage ofhis old friends of the mining region, and
.elsewhere. • " . THOMAS - WREN Maluino . TCity. •
A'eril 21, 'GO • ' • • „ • • • 16-ti . -
_
el 0 CoAl. OPERATORS
.41t.311N.ERS.
1 -Pioncei.Boiler Work.. •
.
The sobseribeis respectfully invite the %
attention of the business community to" 1;111_, •
theirntoiler Works, on Railroad Street, "yln:
below the Passenger Depot, Pottsville,
whnvethey are prepared to.
BOILERS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION..
SmOke. Stacks, Air Sticks, - Blast Pipes,..Gkaometers,
Drift cal* Ac. • Boilers on hand. • ••
'Being practical Mechanics, andlaVink foryears de
tedthemselves entirely to this branch of the busines s, (latter themselves that .work: done at, their establish
ment will give satkifaction loan who may; .favor them
with a call. ; Individuals. aud.Compiudes will find It.
greatly-to
_their advantrike 'I u exam,nie 'their work be
fore engaging. eliewhere.: ' - .JOHN T.. NOBLE..
•Jan ' . • IdATHEW. .BII.ODA.
WASHINGTON IRON WORKS
. •
NOT itlE.The works of the late arni. of Wren &
Bro.. known as the "WASIIINcITON
IRON WORKS, 6 locatedon Coal street,4 l llllC
in the:Borongb of Pottseille, will be )15. 11 :55,
:continued by the subscriber 14 all its rti
various branches. viz: Stearn Engine -777
building: and all kinds of Machinery for mining eitlier
coal ore.; blast furnaces of -hot or cold blast: all
kinds of railroad castings and- railroad ^car "ftataree - of
wrought and cast iron r all kinds of brace castings all
kinlis •of runithwork, - sad all sizea. of. the • latest im-.
proved pumps;.siogie and double acting. 'Repairing
promptly attended to and neatly executed. .
- By careful attention to business the subscriber trusts
he will 'receive a share of ltie.Public patronage so lib
erally bestowird on.the late arm. JAMES WREN:
.Pottsville, September 1. 1865. ..'• • . •• •
DINEGROVE Iron Work's..
- 1 . - PINEGROVE, SCIIITYI..OO., PA. 'l%l O ll
J. M. ROHRER, Machinist Engineer,
1 - I:OPEISITOft. • • • -• •
• t lAL ;I.OIEI
January 30, 'O4 .
AISD L AND11110N• WODKIS;
•
The subscribers are .now thlly we
.red to furnish, nt the Ashland Iron
Works,. Steam - Engines . . and . Pumps o
any power and capacity, for mining and
other purposes; Coal Breakers of every l --. - 7 7 "2"-,1: - '
size and pattern now in use r together with castings and
forgings •of every description, - Coal and Drift Cars of
all sizes and patterns, large Truck and Horse Cara,—
all furnished- at the, shortest, notice. The finbacribers
flatter •themseives that, inasmuch as every member of
the firm Is a practical- mechanic, 'they will be able to
famish machinery that will compare favorably with any
in the ReM, on. All orders directed to J: &M:
Ashland, Schuylkill County, 'Pa:, will receive prompt
attention. . - =
Ashland, JnlY 9 ; '64-
VOIINDRIir AND • MACHINE SHOP;
Ateism•• fluor IRstete'ry, &e. '
NOTICI3.—The business of the late •
dna of. SNYDER & MILNIA - will be t 1.7
confirmed by the snbScriber in all its
dons branches of SteaniTngine band . -
Eng, Iron Founder.' and manufirmnrer of
air kinds of Machinery; for. Rolling Mills, Blast Funs
ces, .Railroad Cars, &e.,.&c. He will also continue the
business of Mining and -Selling the celebrated Pine
Forest White Ash -and Lewis And Spohn Veins- Red
'Ash Coals, being sole proprietor of these Collieries. •
• • GIIORGA W. SNYDER,-.
BOILERS A 1711) •STAEKeI.
. - The intscriberis prepared to-execete •
orders for the abeve articles, die - r
patch, at the old place of bualnesi, Coal 5 1 Tgl
Street, below Norwegian. 20 feet boil- 1:7 0 - , , 12 t z
era always en • band. Also, the mann-
. -
. • Coal rind. Orlier,l9hovila, .• ~ • •
Of the beet material: and workmanship. Reinke
promptly attended to. rar - Femi for mints ventilation
always on hand: • , • • JAR= SPARES. •
Pottsville, Angi:ist 27, ied BMy
.
. .
. THE. MOUNT CA.IIMEL
IRON COIVEPAIT'f . •••,'
MOUNT.'.
NORVINUMBEILLAND COUNTY, PA. -
.- 01101:NTEID UNDER ERZ LAW Crt ITiLE 18 - rtt,lS63 !
140 N .AND
Machine; Screen, andCak-Shops.
This' Company Is iompo eed of Practical Methanica
In all the branches, ancl will faithfully fill all olden; for
work entrn,ted to them:- We are .tutlng Jonas Laub
enaletn'a Patent for making. Square-Iron Woven
- . 3014 AS LAIffIIIrNSTETN, Prest,
HOWELL 91iSSIN . , Supt.
. . .
CglAlk LANDS at assibllnassetlion twithoit
. reserve;) on TUESDAY, September Mb'. MI. at .
12 o'clock. nom at the Blerebanio.lllweitsuage,.
Phillip aid Sophia Iltaier.Traets,*
containing over- 633' acres. ktuated western end..of
Broadish:mien, - on the line Of the 'Mine HMRalkoad,
7 miles from Pottsville, 4 mike' froth Idineinville and
'Jutlnd, in Batlet Ttnsnablpi• i3chtrylk ~ ill,cki Pa..
An= 17, Vt. • • . Bk.&
INDIA : . RUBBER GOODS.
IitEDIJCED PRICES.
ilannfactude -Agency, 708 .ohednut
PAILLADELPHIA.
Machine Saint. &mania*
_Ile" ac, W.
Rubber Articles adapted . to Nechanseat andlianafacta
iUbruPersat Druitglida' and Statirmeaso Articles,
Shoes, Clklthing, am,
14 1 140f.ftt Nat on aptiltatku: - •
Zl;.* •
".„
tigapiamio.tilz"-n6-741E1IMM"
SATURDAY SEPTEMBER: 14,, 180"7
MISCELLANEOUS.
; IRON. AND STEEL, --
WIRE -ROPE;
MANUFACTURED
• • . -
JOHN A. ROEBLIING,
TRRNTON,
- • •
• , • r.
FOR INCLINED . PLANES, • MINING,
STANDING - RIGGING, BIISPENI
SION BRIDGES.-FERRIES, STAYS AND
GUTS ON DERRICKS, CRANES AND
SHEAR% 'ELEVATORS, TILLERS, &C.
A!arse.rock of
WIRE ROPE CONSTANTLY . ON RAND:
comp FILLED wmi nutrAreli.
rw-For etzength. gm and cam:see chttasz, Which
will be seat on application: '
TO COAL. OPERATORS. - " 2 •
. ,
GREAT TKITCOVIIIIIINT com, smarm
• The undersigned ere now prepared to manufacture,
at their shop ' ilineraville, all Minis of SCREENS for
"saim&Coal, of the Improved manufacture, patented
to AMU Laubenateln; ith February, 1813.
.epv:F:;' z7 &e.
Argo 1111111‘
WEIN - Win
ENE
MIR -
ILILIL MAW
/ASV
Screens mennfactured by this process, are more du
sable, maintain'their form better, and are furnished as
cheap as any to be had in the County:
They are 'made of square. iron. .in anch ,shape as to
'prevent the Coal sliding from* one size to the other be;
fore it is thoroughly assorted: thus 'petering it better
than can.be done by cast iron or wire screens.
minnummions
•,• eeee®eeseee
.minimmiummis
Malinmennin
'IOIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMI
MONIMMENEMM
.
•. The manufacturers urg en tly request sit Operators
wanting Streens, to exa e those new.pstent Screen- .
at their shop, or at work at the . Mammoth Vehl• Col
liery of George S. Repprier; near St: Clair, where they
.have.been in nee for some time. •
..13y purchasing screens made tuider - thiti Patent, bit
gation,or any trouble as to patent righti Will be avoided:
All work done with promptness and dispatch__ ..
L:I4IJBENSTEM,
Mineraville JllllO l 1862: • • ' 2341. •
" - • '
, a 4- - ..t-: 'NI' ••-- -- .-s- , 7---, • ' '
_ ~ t, ,?.. - e,,•*-4 '.:- - .-z-a, t.'-' i , 1 - -
-,-----
J. O. FRICK,
ERICCESSOR TO BROCK a SHOKKASEak)
yairorun, . • ' '
s or
WIRE COAL - SCREENS,
Under the Jenkins , Potent,
COB. RAILROAD et, 'NORWEGIAN EMIL, -
-- . POTTSVILLE PA. • .
. .
• 'GEORGE 'REX •
AIaRIOAN GALVANIZENTI, WORKS,
• 43 and 41' Richmond ISt, rhilada.
. .
We are prepared to Galvanize all kindei of right
and Cast Iron at shortest notice and in very man
ner.
We keep constantly on band hest BlOom and nib
died Sheet Iron; all - Noe., Spikes, Nails and Rivets.
Best Wrought Iron Welded Pipes, All sizes, at lowest
prices and prompt delivery. • • ' •
Special attention paid to the flimishing of Boller
Iron and Sheet Iran for in and'ov Wide schutes for the
mines. • .. Jaa,
Jowl A. Pirreasost..
.• • •
PATTERSON - 13ROTHERS,
- - DEAL ESTATE AdTS.,-.
01 1 71Ca—licallastastengo St., Pottsville / (oppo- .
. • • r site lion. Offtne.) •
The sale and rent of j Lots; Pnrini.and Land
solicited. - -
Land interests looked after and Rents collected.
May st..BT •
•-• . • • 1.5.13,
JEWS JARED'S
"BMA TT, DE PARIS."
.
The New Bealathier of the Skin.
Teitimonials from Celebrated Ladies.: •
The secret of beautifying the. skin 'bean g known
only to . Messrs. Jared & Rene, they : honorably state
that it differs from all other preparations: ' It gives to
thernost. harsh and freckled ski* bent the tetture and
color of , polished ivory, removing an.. discoloration
whether appearing as frec it ies„„tatt, 'mambas moth,
or blarirworm specks, and is especially suMelarni in
smoothing out the marks left - by Small - Pox. '
The agents of. "liltmairde Paris , most confidently
'submit to the public-the earnest endorsements of such
distinguished ladles as • .
Bigness FELICITA VESTVALI, Mies .
MAGGIE MITCHELL , Mrs: D. P. BOWERS. LU.- • •
• CILLE WESTERN. Mad. PONLSI. Mrs. EM
MA WALLER, LUCY RUSHTON, .NOR- . .
.
MIS_ DE M.Oll - 11RUPTES, Mies AG- •
NEki PERRY,
and many others, *hose ,high standing in the,renfes-
don gives the stamp of trnthftfinesa to* their intelli
gent an:l-genuine approval. • - • • •
THE BEAUTIFUL LUCILLE WESTERN. SAYS:
I find that the "Emir, -produces all - this brilliancy
of rouge and My-white. ' with the great and peculiar
advantage of total harmleasness: It really adds to the
softness and beauty of the skin. - • . •.
THE MAGNIFICENT VESTYALI. SAYS:
I have suffered so much from the • variouti white lo
tions, ske., which my theatrical profession obliges me
to use, thatl consider it a perfect benefaction to findha
preparation :which -gives the necessary whiteness to
the skin, and leaves the skin rool and smooth,
. MISS MAGGIE MITCHELL SAYS
•
I have tried the skin lbeautiffer, "latmall de Partel,”
and found that It instantly imparts a natural bloom and
freatmess to the complexion.
"Jared Email de Awls*. Is used" as a delicate beauti
fier of the skin for TheaUe. Saloon or Ball Booln,
the moat relined and scmpulons ladies : producing all
the beautifying effects of range -ana lily-white, with
out their: vulgar glare or injury to the akin.
Sold l a rr o all fast-class Druggists, Perfumers end La-
_ . ,
L. lambent', 824 Broadway Demos Barnes ei Co.
andF. C. Wells) Co., New York, and Eugene Jodi",
111 South Teeth street, and Johnson, Rollaway &
Cowden, Thiladelptds,' Agents. . ,
Orders by mall should - be addressed - to JAR', t
RENA General Agents and importers, NeW Ybric
ItZW Read This!
J R TROXELL'S.
OKEAP OIEDIA I . GLASS, AND
CROCKERY STORE,
Dente Street, ;Opposite'; :Mortimer Roue
POTTSVILLE.
. .
The • citizens of Pottsville and neighbot town's.
villages and hamlets,' one and all, are Wei to call
and eland:ie my stock of wane before . buying else;
wham as jam not to be undersold, and Can -brat,*
keepers with every article. they wart in say line
of badness; In the stock of - . • -
• • Freiach Chlfd -
will be ionnd Tea Betta, Dinner Setts, Card and • Cake
Baskets, .Watch Cases, :Segal' Holders, Match liatea.
blotto Mno,•Motto Cope lind Saucers, Wee, Colones,
China Vett, for Children, and k general irallety of Toys,
.
: • . • Glaiiis.Wae...• •
ChOicest, lamest patterns„ consisting of ..Table and
Bag vinataere,Ctiampagne and . Wine Wawa, Ale and
Beer. muses, Deanuera *Bar and Bitter Bottle/000h
lets. Mates,- Castor Bottles, Pitchers and :Cream? Cal
eries,Sugar Bowls- Spoon Hada* Syrup
.Cans, Fruit
'
*Bowls, Jars, Cake Stands, Kerosene Lamr a t
even- variety, Lamp Mumma, raintennsi.Candlet
Gandy flant - itc., an: , :
.Cria,Ckeifyi Crociierfl: • -
'A assortmect of:IKON STONE CBIN of AB:
fertmt patterns, in'setta or single.pi&es, tosuit the pub
lic.. 4A large Sanortment of ourunon C. C. Were, whtch
will Pell at JoR AVMs. - • •
:Yellow-and Stoiteepirare. •
totilio L qullenders,Aitlk
Jelly Pfteberk Tea romVßlltter . .PC 45 . 1111 *
:-.-Tollet Setts, Casters, Slop Jim
and Foot Bathe t . Quart and Pint. Flasks ;.Cosl . .th4
aba Prtrit'Sara of eivry description. - •
• . XKIIMANTS t scan sell you Goode at GlitifFiiissi;
thus Nag yon and see if it is not so.- .
0131.1.15.. STOKES. E. T. TAYLOR ' .
For tbe coureilatre of our:
patrons:and others at si distance,
we here Inesent'a diagram of
aeltatu.by which a
good At will be guarantied, .by
the eizoi to the' .nder
desiirliatrefri the-ieconvorsthic
aaaUl Pr9l. ctesx.
_Lama of Bock ffcan i;
and &Omit° •
Lava of .11tme, fifth-am
mooked4 from Co
Fosse Yeasurs,—Arolindibt
most: ton ye. Willi
Waist JIM* •;.-4kroimili
.
ETtite whether tbe moon fe
:.SheTeammeime as ix Mai
" •
side iron Itip.beme;iiii mood tie WlLlViltltthiP L
SWIMS ON ,Ilazazais werr liau. Tim away.:
Woos To log wow s% Tr lintairAbroaT.,
CH&L - RTOKEN 4116-11,4
: •
witexanswir rigssairrag4--Riaisit ,
AF i alt WOO* eat lot V al stimmit.
owN old iniwysers. &
9 4 1 4 124 10 1. - 9.10114114,
HARDWARE.
• •
:.:LEWIS-C:2110 - MPSON (1;06 . 4
••
•
HARDWiag,. cvrisev, MON,. TOOLS
cam MINTIM AM!. ay4iLIGET,""a76N 01 Tx" 144.“
BRIGHT CO: -
itAItDWAIIE 4. IRON.. DEAL.E.IIS
. •
• SPOKES, I'ELLOta, swats,
HATCHET AI4D - HAMMER HANDLES, • •• •
.. • MLNIES , PICK HANDLES,•• • :
: • ' • MUD PICK HANDLER:,
•• DLES
. . -
•• tarq'actory 8611/0,13 Street.. Store' In Ceatre
stroet*Potteville, nearly oppoattelle.M.thera' Bank - •
Time 8,'67 • ' •. • . 884. •
IRON .AND STEEL,
FLAT dc ROUND WIRE ROPE,
for Inclined pidae~,
SHIP -E1G41116 Etc., Etc.,
AilD ALL DESCRIPTIONS WIRE,
F,;HAZA.IID, 4auch iChunk, Caiboa Co.,
, PENXSYLVANI . A.
.Feb 28, •8i
BRIGHT &:C4,
Hardware,
Cutlery,
Tools,
: Paints ,
Glass,
&a.. &0.,
NEARLY. OPPOSITE THE NlNERS'ilinili l
roitsyme, Pa.
Great=: - latish
FOR
ib
210. 'CENTRE ST., 210.
Grand Closing Out Sale
" SUMMER STOCK."
'THE NEW YORK CHEAP
- DRY GOODS STORE."
150 Drei3s Patterns 500 Yards Muslin
Tel l 9 Craft a yard.
41 750 Tar& EVSLIN
s2.so,'Worth $4.
100 Dress-Patterns
A 10 Cents a Yard.
V inn() Y'ds Muslin
AT 12 CTB. A YARD.
(1 yard wide )
1000 PDS PIUSLIN
$3.50, Worth $5.
75 Dress Patterns
54:50, Worth $6.50
2i),000 Ttls Muslin
Comprising all the finest
[ and best • standard • .
• grade's, from
.to 25 cents . . _ •
M9II4MS
.POPAAN,Si
GRENADINTS
*O6l de Laides,
de., dc..,
2 5
PER CENT.
DLotrTION• TROY
ILEGCLIR RITES.
ANOtHER
REDUCTION
In the rstes of
STAPLE AND
DOMESTIC
German Prints,
GOODS. 1 I ONLY 18 Cents. -
,
0011PLETE ASSORTMENT OF .
Ticks, Denims. Towlings,
Dia-
Perings. White Goods, Em- -
brolderies.• Hoop Skirts,
Corsets; NothmS. Mos
'
fiery, etc., etc., etc. •
AT'AN ADDITIONAL BILIDUCTION OF
15 :T" - ::Esn '. 0 E N'T--:;
Erllsl Ou r Former
CALL IN TIME
TO BECITRE BARGAINS AT THE
CHEAP NEW,YORK. DRY GOOD STORE
. . .
J. GM.LLATiritt Mc CO., , .. •
_
.140. 211i0 Cent?e,- corner Norweieen St., opposite the
Mortimer House. - April 20..61-1.6 Aug. 24-84-
TEE.ART OF CUTTING, DRESSES.
DRESS TRIMMING, EMBROIDERY; do.
EIRB...IIIILTTCHEitIIiON, Second Street, below
Ilfarket Pottsville, respectfully informs the ladies of
Pottsville and vicinity desirous oncoming the art of cut
ting Drones,. Famines, Sacgues, Jackets, Gored Dreg -
WraPnere, Children's and all new styles of Street
and. Bonne Garments, that she ha/aortal° Min
Otrpenters Lately:lmproved Models; now extensively ,
need by the most fashionable , dress-makere. Two
hours' inatruction will enable any lady to cut cul fit
drosses equal to a dress-maker. '
Mrs. Hutchinson has on , hand a, choice assortment
of zephyrs; 'wools and yams: - zephyr pattern canvas ;
silk, worsted and cotton coat'and areas buttons. Trim
mings and Notions; xilagic and Coventry linill e lgt
Tape Trimming, Gold and Silver Braid and B
Hair Braid. in Mimi,' Cotton and; 'Mohair; Em
hroidery and Sewing' SW and Silk Braids; ireptirp,
Grochet, 7 /Lfgban, and 'Zephyr Needles ; Linen, 'Floss
and Crochet Thread and'Braid ; French Working and
Marking % Cotton i Stamped - Goods', for Braiding and
Embro [!'Embroidery,' Machine Stitching Plain &Wing
and Stamping done promptly to order.
'IW - Mm. R. ham on band a choice assortment of ele
t Braiding and Embroidery designs for ladies , and
Ch ldren'a dresses, to which tie invites attention; -.
April 2r, HST • - - •
:DIEHSHEI L 'S .
.PATENT • SLATE PICKER
Tide 111 learianted iirrenxrvir all &a and nem& mint
' from, coal ailit paaamtbrongn breidter. It la lined
at many ouna Uoghont•,-thaßeglw with Pe**
Waiteto dam. • Lanigan, Poi:Willa; John H. Dew
eta, 131nunokin, and Henry Hail. T* ll **;Yebo bay*
the Pinkerin:nae. - Addrees
• /113IHY & MILL, Pottsville Pa.
Jerk ii)Tr‘ 'haw
ai e lt g l i rg lih arsi ce ltMatter. Dishes, Nap= ithigit
'de., air— Silver Tobacco
Bail* lined with ijohl7" R. C. GREEN.:
Dec. l4 . Ve—ge- . • & etre et. Pnitavilla..
. .
oir Pottsville, Pesina i
M. denier Ist =SW, MCIBICAL aIBTRUMIENTS,
FIA I4OB ;IIXLODEQNS. ORGANS,. ft.. , botog be 12
appointed rote .1 11. 3 .31t,failbe celebrated . •
. .
.011 r" Orgnals,
' lll. WalaiOtaeh ßt dkl U would respect:tint-rile;
manse to. he musical community that be , an fund&
thanauteculdied favorite tubittes &mina, In la styles
tuarroyeccanwr' prices. The q=lity and
lummit.tig ton% with:the power of expreallon in the*
Mink tuittemeny admired and praised, whilerthely
WittidM i skid beautiful Walt make thenthe atoetwi
,
Every
Tat bititint tiRGARS 'aze adapted 'trws, PAM&
1,1318; iIiaI:MaNDSCHOWS..
: Thirezr7l ll _, ItianAMO lie WM/Mich.
illrEver* - Inuitnanmeet Warren, stool,
lso, Am* Abe aalii if the much adodrad
ir* meeasiii: aid Israionioni qrgasui,
sx. vanities .4 ithitekin, Northtmdeelaidlizin
fustramesto are unliwnially liked-
They possums a mews arid Meter of tone, which
heirstedvadtbe tudted commemdation of the immeical
proferioui nmeesdrai t abuse impreuriented Wit;
Itritiammi ate
ait eeretry tinned to call arideimmtw,
t9rraadnaGA.ll eimiiimeimikme sod ; oadaea
romewtiewered or Illedieud
=mon turallittism=
I nom and Wareltorzew Vie wed* amilarams.
be Week bet Ow - tram sirest.rism
The new MAMA of amusin g . -adopted by George
P. Rowell'i Ca, Adreithshg Ave* No. SO
Row. New .y ark, la attractlaia great deal of attention.
The following extract from a speed/ delivered before
the N 7 Y. State Eqorial Cooveittlon, aafely holden:
it Pea= Yang h 7, a priminint &fn . ttistog Agent of
R. T. city goes to shoti that he at least aeknoteledges
its admtsges.
'Prom Jamestown.: if, J.; ,Tonnial Of August 2d, Edited
: ify 0.. B. Bum*, :Mann= of Committee on do-
vriniiipts *anima
Pettengul snots oppositiOn to that plan
from the POBLIaILIViI stand point alone. .He showed
the publishers that by . this-system of ohitracting they
were Vitra; lower. rates than . they gave: their own
ham customers or others equally as prompt and good
customers: that they were minim one portion of their
paper to be need to compete with and underbid-the
other /Minions r that the owner of the space thus sold
could come right In and beat the publishes. prices
and" take his buidnesis away from him that if the
pebilsbus, • fhlir understanding this, still wished
to continue so irregular and - unbusiness-hlk a
siitanke CPettingill & Co.) should. of course cease
trying to get advertising for the pined) at their regular
rates and go - into the other :system of centracting
which he could stand if the printers could."
The anxiety on the' account' of newspapers is
called for. There net one in .twenty whist' sronlo
sot prefer to receive all their foreign patronage an this.
plan. when It le . folly.undetatood. It le too generally
recognized sa thoroughly, benedclal to all parties eon
nernel to be Injured in the
. least by an (Mpg which
maybe raid agapist it by inierearcil parties: .
Advertisers should scud fora circular giving fall ex
planation&
POLLOCK INSTITUTE. a first' class
Boarding School for Boys., at Pittefleld.
Fall. Term of 20 weeks begins October 4,1865. For
paolculars address Ray. W. C. RICRIRDB, Prin.
• .
Hasie you seen the "PENN - LETTER . 110011„?. ?or
copying letters without the Use of either press or water?
It eaves time.. - labor.„and the expense of a copying
prser. For saki by all drat class stationers, . and at the
oftled of the "Penn Manufacturing Work," 702 'Chest
nut St., 'PhiLsdeinzia, Pa. - • • . -•• :
A few more geed Agents Wanted. for General L C.
Enter! •lILSTORY OF THE SECRET SERVICE.^—
'Dere/seed • commleelon allowed. and greater Induce
ments offered. Address P. GARRETT . & C 0.,. Box
217. Plillmielplile, Pa.
6000, fi
I.„ENTs•oi*"led-AV`te.": fa 81x m N e e w . i
all
v ve n n;
great profits. Send 20c; and get SO pages and sample
Agents lave madeslooooo. .Spluatro Brown,
. •
. - • •
.
. • Al Treatise en ISenfaese,•Catarrh. Con.
sumption and Cancer...• Their causes and.meins of
immediate relief and speedk. cure. sent free. • Send
particulars to Dr. STILWELL,. No:. 40 South •fith St.,
Williamsburg, It. 1: .• : . . • - ' ' . . .
MADAM FOY'S
,Corset 814 rt gopporter.
. .
Combines In 'one garment a .
rum rrtvree Coaarr,• and most
sirableSkirt Supporter ever offerd
the public: 'lt places the weight of
the skirts upon the shoulders
stead of the lalps r -improves the
form Without tight 'gives
ease and elegance; is approved and
recommended by physicians.. *an-
D.
ufacturqd by , D. D. SAIINDE
, •
.96 SIULUnt
PAINTS.VOR': FARM.LRS
And Others' ~ T HIC GRAFTnic MINERAL PAINT
COMPANY are now manufacturing the Beat, (`Neap"
eat and most dumtdepalru in use; two coat! well rut
on, tatted With pure - . Linseed 011, willlust 10 or 15
years: -It is- of a light brown or beautiful chocolate
color, and can be changed to green, lead, stone, olive:
drab or cream; to suit the taste of the consumer. - It
is.valuable for nonage, Bann, Fences, Agricultural Im
plements, Cthiltge and Carinakera,Palla and Wooden
ware.-Danvas,lMetal and Shingle Roofs,' (it being the
and Water proof); Bridges, Burial Cases, Canal Boats,
'Ships arid Ships' Bottoms, Floor 011 Cloths, (one man
efacturer having used 5000.bbla. the past year, and aa
a paint ' for any purpose is unsurpassed for body. dura
bility; elasticity, and adhesiveness. • Price $6 per - bbl. •
•of 600 lbs., which will supply a farmer for years to
come: ' Warranted m all cues aa above. • Send for a.
circular, which gives full particulars. . None genuine
'unless branded in a trade murk Grafton Mineral Paint.
Address DANIEL Proprietor, 'Pearl
Si:, New York. . • Jute 15,-244t . •
YOU ILE TVAIIFTIECIIO LOOK /lEEE.
Agents, both male and female,. wanted' every Where
to sell the P...rintx l;iiranwiv Ink Ittammonr, (by which
from one to two pages can be written without replen=
fishing with 'ink), and our Fancy and Dry Geode, etti..
Can clear from $3 to $lO a day... No capital rewitred.—
Price 10 cents; with an advertisemeMent describing an
article for eale in our Dollar Purchasing Agen,
,Ctsom.aita 5555 TOL.. . '
at 13. Cts. a Yard.
DEAFNESS CURED. The Organic Yibra•
tor AO Into the ear, la not. , pereeOtible, and enable*
deaf persona to hear diatinetly at thatch aod at pahlic
assemblies: :Send prtictilare to Dr. STLLWELL, No.
46 South 6th St., Williantaburk, N. Y.
44, 6.4, 6 4 yards wide.
450 Vds Prints
•WE ARE
- COMING,
And Will present to asy person sending us club tn
our Great One Price Sale of Dry u .
and Fancy Goods,.&c.,
a 811kIlitss Pattern, Piece °LSl:meting,
free of mist: . :Catalogue of goods and sample, sent to
any address free. % Address J. 8. II a WBS & CO., .30
Hanover St., Boston, Mass. P. O. Box 5125.
at 10 rths a yard.
1500 Y'(18 PUNTS
At 1936 Qll3 A YARD.
Gpiendld Goods,
Fast Colors,
2 Cases PRINTS
• • - •
Thirteen Year.s.:Ago,
Dr. Loves, of Providence. it 1.. discovered Remedies
with is bleb he has cared hundreds of canes of Paraly-'
es,. Fits, and all forms af :Nervous 'Diseases. 'Bend
two stamps fur Pamphlet and Certificate.
15 Cr.E 4tYAREt.
.1 Case PRINTS
.17 Cia: a Tait:,
A FFLICTED
RESTORED I IGNORANCE • RE-
A POSED FALLACIES UNMASKED ! . .11ighly im
portant to both sexes, married or single, in heal th. Or
disease: Dr. LARMONPS Pads, .Lopden and .New
York Medical Adviser and Marriage Guide, Seth edition,
400 pages, nearly 100 Anatomkal upon
Me n tal and -Nervous • Debility,: -Urinary Deposits and
Impotency, affections of the Bladder, Kidneys, Ganito,
Urinary Organs, sad their'consemiences, and , anatomy
of both, sexes I—European hospital .practice—the Au
horSt moral.legitimate -and' effectual method of pre
venting too rapid increase - Of frimily.the runeqnaled
Paris and London treatment, tzc. - Mailed free for $I SO,
closely sealed.; -
All who would avoid the barbarous treatment.with
Mercury, -Copatba, .Irdections, Cauterizations, Quack
Specn, Antidotes and Instruments,- should own this
valuable work or consult the Doctor personally or by
letter, No. 113 Broadway, N. Y., frOm 10 A. M. to 5 P.
M.: Poet-Gib:011oz 844, N. Y., is also the addiess re
quire% Consultation, Advice, and Medicine $5.; in all
cases W advance.
e Concur . with -other papers in recommending
Dr: LARMONT and hie work."—Courier des Etas Vale,
German die Reform,. Dispatch, Steals Zeitung;
Medical Review, dc. - . • . .
1 Case Merrimacke
18 Cu: a Yard.
1 CASE
AWATCH FRICIEi:LA Silver P.-Watch given gratis to the purchaser of every 100 of Kennedy's
Mammoth Prize _Stationery. Packages, the hugest'n .
the world. an inducement to have th9n
duced„) agents , sell the.- packages as fast. as .they can
reach them out..- 30 Rollers per day can be made aura.
We have agents that sell on. an-average 1000 per week:
-Price per. hundred, 15 - Dollars. . : Retail at 1.5'
And a Watch in the • bargain that will retail for sib
more.- . For hill • particulars of Prize Package; and
other saleable goods, address R. MONROE KENNE
DY; Cor. sth and Wpod.St., Pittsburgh, Pa.. •
August 81, 'CU : 35-
• SCHOOLS:..
Principals of Academies, Seminaries, • &c. should'
comtat us in reward to advertising : No charge for in
formation. GAO. P. 'ROWEi.I, & CO., &Worthing
. • INVENTORS. • ,•.
Ifion' wlith to .Advg•rtlt‘e Ehould cpiastilt GEO.
P. RO WEL & 00v, •4t) Park• Row, N. Y. • 364 t,
THE MOUNTADT CITY .COOK
the market; hitutefettared by
/1 . 4 •!"7 0 '* e ,r•Thirreelin George Mc,
_PO.T Tfilfll.l.lf,
. .
Is sold atn lower erica than the same dew of doves
notobtained bat min be aold for In this market.
AIM 'a ; stock orother Cocdring_and Heating
Stoves, Hest= for, Churches and: ptivate dwellings,
flanges,," Cast - Iron Sinks, dic. - Alse't full assort
ment of Tht. Ware, .nl, Reellos..end . Sheet iron.
Work. • „Also Iron lislUng, Water Pipes, Wash 'Ket
tles, and avariety Of work done in Use Foundry to
which =reds' attention.la paid. An In want of stoves
=bold bear In mind - that those manufactured by me.
catibe kept ill, 'repairs: at less allilplLLOAElli 'be mare'
=
AY attended' to..ttnt auch era,, , bronght bare
mew places. which tn. many cases, - when ont'of
order, must be sold as 411rtio; 'Owing tolls difElculty
of obtaining the netessary pi= when wanted. . ....- --
year's practical =petted= =
in this Om"
and advantegos,..::stuthles me to sell at the very
lowest prices. • , DIME. .
, • •
GEORGE- 13ERNET, .
EPROM _
atmoiet liteeeti leedwora greeml as Mira,
Would antdaince totbe pent that he bas taloto the
dare logerned &torlir.'•Dditlet Atusad'e old
riZ ea mbeed ail bestows tahls line via be pomp*
to.: _ Math Ct. 47-Is4t
umws. Hamm, Clthakes,-.ltorse litakets., - so4
ottserbndtn g implements. at .
s • =Gar 11611.Pottsilila.,,
7-11Z n eilare rine;
wif t =ecesilly Inform bin Med& AM tbepablle,
er end liebsity c Alist be. Ma loata
miasma.% and opened en aeon at the come of Mutat
mid Steicad soroele, Pothrellle,yB4- where be :era be
amm—T A.ltifkbt P. ti 2,.
P: X. D. . D.
''...., , :::•'. - ' - : ,, :' , '1 4- . --", •q -, :; , : ,. . - .•.':::• , •' ' • • -
.:f4•':,.—''gSrt'.','',,'_=!'.l;,'.::-7:a'!..!.';'''.:-:••.,t'i•"•=-
MISCELLANEOUS.
SICNIFIVANT.
EASTMAN ac • KENDALL, •
4:5 Hanover Ift.,Boaton, ffnu.
•.
SIA/ON DERR,
ma& IRO" WOrIEIX
THE , =MB AND THE GBAY.
."The womenof Colninbasallistierippi. animated
nobler emitimentethatrare many ofi• their sisters, have
shown themselves impartiid in their. offerings made to
the memoryOf the dead... The* 'strewed noel= alike
on the gmves of the Confederate and of the National
soldiers. o —liaw YOLK
By the-flow of the Miami 14,4, •
• Whence the fleets of iron have fled,
• . Where the blades of the grevegrass quiver, .
• . Aileen &reds° ranks of the dead t• •
. • ' Under the sod and the dew, •
• • Wafting the judgment day ;
Under the nue, the Blue; • • .
• • Under the other, the Gray. •
, •
These In'the Ft:things of glory, • . .
Thoseln the gloom of defeat, ,
All With the battle-blood 'gory, • •
In the dusk of eternity meet;:— .
Under the end and the de*, ' • -
Waiting the judgment day ;---
Under the laurel, the Blue
Under the willow, the Gray.
•
From the silence of sorrowful hours
"• The desolate mourners go,
lovingly laden with flowers • "
Alike for the friend and the foe
Under the semiarid the dew;
• . Waiting thejedgment day;
.llnder the roses, the Blue ; .
• Under the lilies, the Gray.
BO with an egnal eplendor. - - I -
The morningenn.raya fall,
With a touch, impartially tender,
• On the blossoms blooming for all ;
• •
Underthesod and thedew,
Waiting the Judgment day; •
Broldered Ith gold, the Blue; '
Wallowed with gold, the Gray.
,
So, when the Summer calleth, . . •,
On forest and field of grain .!
With, an equal murmur alletli •
The cooling drip of the rain:.
Under the cod and theriew,
• Waiting theludgment day ; . ,
' Wet with the rain. the Blue; • .
Wit with the rail., the Gray.
. .
Badly, but not with upbrildimt,
. The generous deed was done ; •
In the storm of the years that are fading,
No braver battle was won 1—
ITteler4he sod and the dew,
• . Waiting the judgment day
. ' Under the blossoms.. the Blue :
Undei the garlands, the Gray..
•No more shall the war-cry Sever,
Or the winding rivere be red; • •
•.
They, banish our anger forever • -
. • When they laurel the graves tit onc•dead I
•
Under the sod and the dew.
Waiting.thejudgment day •
Love and tears for.the Bine,
- •;. . Tears and love for the Gray: . •
—Atlantic Monthly: . • • • •
• ' • . ASK ME NOT. TO DRINX t
i'alr lady. ask inc not to drink,: l•
. A toast to thee. to.olght z_ •
rim broken vows and blasted hopes •
Expose the demincs blight.
pot ba , lr the wine—l dare not taste—
Put back the sparkling bowl: ' .
Foy who bath quaffed a draught so deep;.
And reached a blisful goal ?
Oh, ask me not, there lies within
A poison deep and dire
And every drop but serves the more
To fan the latent fire. •
Each draught will quench my senim of guilt,
And blast yOnth's budding live
Itacb drop will rink tne deeper still, • .
In moral night.to.grupe. • .
. .
OS ! me not to touch the cup, •
Within arc glaring eyes,
And starving widows, hungry babes,
, And,treezing orphsne•cries ;
Whom the Gods destroy they . that make drunk,
Then ask me not to.drlnk ;
Oh tempt me not, hut spire my Boni -
' From death's eternal brink..
. • .
. .
I have thine sisters, mildly fair,.
• Like angels round my w•ay ;
Whose love 'alike the eters that shine
With undiminiPhed raY
Shull they ne do, .m"d to see me fall, ,
' prey to maddening, drink ; ', • .
And eknodered h... the intro teat binds •
Or enapt the golden link?
Atir;ther sleeps where sadly wave,
The willows in the vale; • ' ,
haulm hinight-whispere froni the sky
Come on the stetting gale • •
• She paPsed away as summer e breath;
In life's Incipient bloom •
Then tempt ins urn t, I would not mar
lier slumbers' in the tomb. • •
MINING, ART AND SCIENCE.
Errexii the London Engiueering, of Auz.lo
THE BOLTON LRON AND STEEL CO.
The planning, of iron and' steel works was,
until lately, a branch of old-fashioned mill
wrighting ; but James Nasmyth, henry Bes
semer, and, let us add the loco:aptive engi
neers, have.advanced it to one of the most
important. departments of mechanical engi
neering -After Mr. Bessemer had built mod
est works of his-own at Sheffield, and John
Brown had adepted his process, Mr. 'Rams
bottoin laid out what are ,still the finest, al
though not the largest, Bessenier steel works
in the world—those of the ;London and
North-Western Railway Company, at Crewe.
The converters, the blowing engines, the hy
draulic apparatus, the dnplet hammers, the
great cogging , :machine, the Siethens furnaces,
the reversing roiling-mill; the tyre-mill, and,
all the. Other. famous. 'plant' of the Crewe
steel . works, were 'perfection itself, as com
pared with' anything known, before ; . and
many of our readers will remember how Mr.
Penn, at the dinner of Institution, of
Mechanical. Engineers,- at Manchester, last
year, unreservedly. expressed his' astonish
ment at, and admiration of. whatho had on
ly the day before seen at Crewe.
While planning the Crewe works, Mr.,
Ramsbettom had at his side !Mr, F. W.
Webb, his assistant locomotive j superintend
ent, and who still enjoys the 'reputation of
being one of .the cleverest locomotive este=
nears ih the profession. Mr. - Webb can, 'of
course, take no credit whatever for the many
special machines which Mr. Ramsbottom -de
signed for his steel works, but the first
named 'gentlemen was; nevertheless, entrust
ed with much of the execution of the:plans
and had the advantage of an intimate knowl
edge of every 'detail of their design, and of
the working of "the plan when completed..
The Bolton Iron and Steel Company (which
by the way, is not a: f'limited" concern in any
-sense) enjoys, besides thendvantage eireap-;
.ital and connexion, that of the direction of
Its,works by Mr.. Webb. who Is now a. part
ner in that company. The works are large,
although not so extensive as a few of the'
greater Sheffield • establishmenta ; but we
shall devote our remarks mainly to the
."steel side;"'as that department of the works
The Bessemer plant consists of a pair of
5 ton converters, blown at 22 lb. pressure of
blast by- a pair of horizontal blowing-engines
by. Hick, Hargraves, and Co., and which are
we believe, of the same pattern of the Crewe,
viz 36 in. steam-cylinders, 54 in. blowing
cylinders,. and 5 fc-. stroke. The hydraulic
apparatusla of the usual kind, ' with pumps
thrown off and on from accumulator, which
is loaded to 3 cwt. per square Inch.
Siemen's furnaces have been constructed
to distil all the coal burnt into gas, to be con
sumed under the steam boilers and in the
the large regenerative re beating furnaces.--
,When the gas is burnt in the flues of the boil
ers, the mouth of each flue-is lined with fire
'bricks, and the gas is sent in at. the centre as
a jet, which draws in air with it, by inductiod
not only around the gas-jet, but also throttgh
'its centre by means of au idternal air-pipe. — lsto smoke, of course, ever proceeds from the
Chimneys of the gas-heated furnaces, and,
indeed, very little heat proceeds up the chim
ney. At Crewe, Mr. Rtmsbottom places a
piece of deal under loCk and key, in the, tail
flue of each gas heated funaace, and if, this
deal is burnt at the end of a week the' far
nace-mahis fined. The Wilson furnaces
now working at.the Bolton Iron "and' Steel
Works are equally smokeless. The.largest
steam-hammer for hamthering the ingots Is
one of the three or four largest in the kingslom, having a-bead of 25 torus, falling .9 ft.
The steam-cylinder is 54 in. in diameter._
The Makers of the hammer were
_Messrs.
.Nasmyth, Wilson and Co , and it is of the
same construction as that at Messra. Camel's,
and whichwe illustrated on page 288. of our
last. volume. It has, however, a - much larg,•
er anvil block, probably the - largest aingle
casting in the world, its weight being 210
tons. This black was cast; not as erre, but
bottom upwards. and a few feet frOm - where
it now tests. -We - hope to'give in ati
number, drawings and a deseription of the
arrangements for casting this block. and need
only say here_that a pit, formed of brickwork
'lined- with loam, was made, mid that the run
from two of Ireland's ctipolas, each charged
with l 2 tons an hour,, was taken down:
through'a - gate at the bottom Of the pit.
large quantity of charcoal"-was first thrown
in, and this floated as the iron rose and - kept
it fromehilling. As - each charge Came in et
the bottom, it rose, by its . specifie levity;
through the leas heated' iron in the , Mould,
and. the result was a hothogeneons „casting.
A - pair of trunnions was cast upon the.biock
at a height at which the tipper partprepan,
, derated over the, lower, and when, - after
many days; the great casting had cooled, and'
the 'mould had - been broken away; brick walls
and bearers were built under these trunnione
Mad the Whole:clueing was tumbled over, big
end downwards: - Powerful jacks-Avere then
- got under it;
- and it was moved horizontally
16 ft- ti) its. Present position; where it le bed- -
!ded'on algood depth of concrete and Cetaieriti
made of iron - borings and'sal immonlaa,
The rail mills are of much the ordinary
chars, and are now employed upon.= .order
for 1000 tons of steel rails for the Lehigh Ca
nal and Navigation Company, 11. Ei. _Other
sections; that , for the - Greetindlan Pesainsula
Company; for the Bhore Ghent inane; where.
50 ton, engines are worked. 'were &Oita, tie; -
es - siso sAmplO, oftlitit formidable:sectiom`
- the Metropolitan ralL a flat-footed. ber,,with ,
la base 6 in: wide, and , which is so dawn to
'roll in steel, and Tel we learded'a day or two
'Bluets. that'll:a BtAtou'raibt bad. done well on.
the . ands:monad - 11de; oafauthority lieng
the resident engineer himself. Some of: the
Great Indian Peninstila double headed 86 lb.'
-rails were tried on 8 feet 6 in. bearings, with
60 tons dead pressure, and deflected but about
limbos on the'average. Curiously, the test-
brought out thellnett of strain Mt the. sides Of
_the rail,' there being eaten converging line.
on the weliof the ran, along which the scrod
had When off s 51161144 Moo of shouts;
• Z-TA'r':.;,;
Single Copies Six Cent§
altranning to the point:cif the appli
eaden of pressure. Then there is-the usualj THE DIAMONIi) Dicirevs.—Trre Ctratostri
ram teat, that of a rain of 1 ton *eight, falls
earaeurn REPAINTED fuses.-.:Tho seem,, eon.
ing freely from any height tip to 48 feet upon! else form, and all the other attractions of this
a rail supported on 3 feet bearings. The an-1 exquisite edition add new delights to one of
vii on which the rail is supported weighs 10 . Dioxiessebeet atorke. Errnme's portraits of fe.
tone 8 ewt.,.this 'Weight • altine"-being an write character,' give fresh interest to Little Nell,
•
_penult, element in the teak - Mrs'. Jarley, Dick Swiveller„ Qatlp„sampsou,
• Brass, The Marchioness, eta., and will tend to in..
The*plate-rolling - mill is of - gocel stiee t and crease the number of
,their admirers. The "Itee
has reversing geer, so that too plates are not printed Pieces" are some of the choicest papers"
lifted over the top roll. The reversing gear, '1 erer . 00ntributed to English.periodicals, many of
which - id merely, a- leper acting alternately them having already won wide favOr in this Donn
e
ea
right and lefluporeclatch, is_ worked by .a try. The convenience and clear type of the "Dia.
hydraulic cylinder and pigeon. The plates are a mood Dickens ," we
o are joa g rn iad aL to know, are duly
sheared on all four edges after rolliag,' and i P This to
the seventif Ontnber of this . issue. The
some excellent plateothearing machinetywith remaining six or seven volumes will be published
steam engines on the same bed-plate, are at - in rapid succession. -.The set, consisting of 13 or
work.. The shears of these machines ate of 14 elegant, little- velumee, will boa choice library
Bessemer steel. We believe that the makers .in itself, -.Besides being so very attractive, It is
are rather laying themselves out' toe steel ; r O r t tk l a e l a b e ' d 'arrt it l h '?diO° ll l
plates, and are , to this end, employing- the
editionis Only El 53 L9 a r c o7n u m n el 25. ' Ban
-very best pig-iron- andespiegel to be had, nan & -Ramsey; booksellers nave it, or it will be
This we know, that when the plates are made . cant postpaid by the -Publishers, Ticknor and
they are sheared on all edges, and the shear-' Fields, Boson.• - `- '
logs tested for toughn'ess, and we saw many
hundreds of testedeamples which bad borne '
much • more than the Admiralty test.... And
yet these plates 'are. guaranteed to 85 tons
teusile strain,•being 2' tons more than some
other makers have guaranteed- - their-plates to
meet the Admiralty. test .• Several plates of
the large size of 13 it 6 in. by 6 ft. 6 in. 'I .y
5 8 in. have been made, and worked Into the
dues of Cornish - boilers: We have spoken
on another page of the use of these plates in
steel boilers,..f6i which they are now. very
largely employed. •
As at all first class Bessenier steel' works,
samples are taken at each "blow" in the con
verters, and .a small quantity of borings Is
drilled from each sample and tested for car
ben, not by analysis, but inferentially by the
solution teat of color, .whereby the chemist
can ascertain very closely the true proportion
of carbon. The use to which the steel is to
be applied depends, of course, upon the' pro
portion of carbon, ,the greater proportion
giving: a hard' strong steel, and the less a
tougher quality of less • tensile strength. 1 1
Large steel shafts are now- made, and one;
made from a 97 cwt. ingot, was sent not long
since to a Belgian firm ; so that even on the
Continent English makers still find a market
for English steel, and that-in - heavy masses;
a trade supposed to' hive been monopolized
by Krupp. Another shaft, from an 85 cwt.
ingot,' was lately, made for the' engines of
Messrs. Kershaw, Leese, & Co.'s great mill
at Stockport, where an iron shaft had failed.
This shaft was made, not exactly at one heat,,
as smiths understandthe 'term, bat the heat'
was not suffered to go down frcim the teem
ing of the ingot to the last blow of' the ham
mer on the forged shaft. All the Corliss :en•
lanes now made by Messrs.ilick, Hargraves,
& Co. are fitted with. steel shafts, whether
specified by the purchasers or not, and' the
pair of 24 - in. cyliuders, 4. feet stroke, making
foe Woolwich Arsenal, have. Bessemer steel
connecting rods. A good deal of steel shaft
ing for millwork is also made in lengths up
to 20 feet, and up to 5 in. diameter. Steel
castings are made also from
. Bessemer steel,
although these are only heavy objects, having
no very thin parts. Rolls, and especially the
pinions for mill-rolls; and weighing about 3
tons, have been cast with good success.
Bessemer steel tyres, when made on the
Crewe plan, have given excellent results; and
Mr. Remsbottom, who; not long ago, used
them only under goods engines, now applies
them to his passenger eegines also. At Shef
field, although there are three Beseemer steel
works, but two make tyres at all, and at one
of these establiehments they are made only
from crucible steel, whileseveril ether firms,
having no Bessemer plant, make crucible
steel ; tyres. At Bolton, .31r. Webb has gene
largely into 'the manufticture of Bessemer
steel tyres upon the Crewe plan: of casting a
conical ingot, hammering this down to - a
"cheese" form, punching oat the centre, and
expanding the hole by hammering the tyre
on a beck iron. - The tyre ingots are weighed
and carefully pared down, to bring all in a
set to the same weight,'.and if, after paring
some are slightly heavier than others, a little
longer heating and scaling Mile furnace, ac
cording to the judgment' of the workman,
equalizes the weight.. The tyre rolling. mill,
at Bolton, designed by Mr. Webb, is the best
we have yet seen, and we. only regret Dail,
having contrived it with some pains, the do
signer does not Cafe to publish drawings of
it. The middle roller is rim up to its woek
by a hydraulic ram under a pressure'of 3 cwt.
per square inch, but immediately . the roll
bites, a pressure of 30 cwt. per square inch
from another set of pumps is put upon the
ram. The handles for working the rolls and
the *engine are most conveniently arranged:.
The engine has a pair Of 20 in. overhead eel
inders, with ,3 feet stroke of pii3ton. • 'The
crank-shaft, beiow,, has - no fly-wheel, bat is
counter-weighted, and -the engine has no ten
dency to stop atone part of its stroke more
than another. It can be, and often is, run at
a piston speed of 1000 feet per minute, and at
the same time may be almost instantly
stopped when tlie tyre has reached the right
diameter. The greatest accuracy is attained
In the rolling, and more than one set of steel
tyres has been sent out to be put . upon 'the
wheels without boring or turning. Indeed,
it is to be regretted that- the wheels are not
ready for the tyres when the latter come hot
from the rolls, so as to , save heating them
again'. . •
The whole works are on
.a large scale, and
the facilities for handling heavy weights are
excellent. A railway of ordinary (4 feet Si
In.) gunge runs throughout the works, and
this is interlined with a mid rail giving a
guage of 2 feet .3. inches for trucks on either
side. Of the cranes, one lifts 40 tons, its jib
being made of heavy steel. plates: Others
have steam-engines on the cram pillar, and,
besides all, the ever-ready force of water, at
pressure equal to 770 feet head, is always
available from the accumulator. Could the.
Old Bolton millwrights of a former generation
live again, what they would say to the works
of their successors ? and to what may we not
look forward - in the future, when, as there is
every reason to believe, manual labor.will be
wholly superseded in
.eveFy branch Of the
Iron and steel manufacture, - when all the
great. metallurgical. operations will be con-
ducted entirely without smoke and with lit
tle noise, and when even our 'present cheap
ness of production shall have been cheapen
ed beyond anything of which the most san
guine inventor has hitherto dreamed ?
G. A. NtSIBEEVIER)S SAFETY GUN AND
. • • BLASTING POWDER. •
This powder to the invention of Mr. G.A..
Neumeyer, of 'rancho, Germany, who' with
his partner, Doctor August Klein, of Leif).
hai taken measures tor its introduction
into this country. .
When exposed to the air this powder is en
tirely inexplosive, and burns - up like so much
wet powder; and'can be nlmtist instantly etr
tingnished with . -water. When clOsely con
fined however, in gun or:blaat hole, so as
to:exclude the. air r It explodes.-with - greater
force than the blasting powder now used.
Its great advantages immining are its safe
ty and freedom from smoke. The numerous
accidents that occur.in withdrawing a charge
from a blast hole, or from premature explo
sions, or from • friction" in tamping ; cannot
take place with this powder, as, it 'will not
Ignite from a spark or by friction. -
When exposed to the air it. leaves much
residuum, but when confined it leaves much
less than the, ordinary powder.
In a gun it Makes 'very little recoil, about
one-balf that of the United States musket
powder. Through the kindness of. Major
GeneralNebb and Brevet Lleutenant-Uoto
nel A. Mordecai, of the - Engineers, Mr: Olt::
ifer has obtained permission tohavis the pow:
der tested at'Weat Point. The result of Col
onel Mordecai's trials of 4,1.11 grain charges
In': the •Unitedl States . 4 13pruigfield - musket
Proved as follOws : t' - • •
lieutneyerVpowdet recoil - Itinehete
; United States . " " • `-:
Ilegitallties maybe iiriefik
1. - When:in:contact' with the air it bards,
pdt dim; net explode; . -
2. When confined in a gtin'or-mine it ex
lodes with'mtich greater - effect than ordina
lestireileitithre, except when
purist ire the open air. <
nudres leessmoke; the smoke-is light;
not injurious, and' disperses' 'easily, and is
nite_itioH~csive..
_."'- 1 "
ba Ir_tithicteleassinolature from the atmo
sphere thin'tha ordinary posider. =
t 6. It doeii riot iota ttoenlosive qualitiesef
;ter having been. wet and re-dried.
7. The_deitituttion. of tbe - graJn_ does riot
Interfere. , witit ite efficiency, the,dist proves
of equalforcet) - _
Owirg'to,the elnipliclty_of Its prepare
s* it* be produced cheaper thin ordinary
powder. . 0 : '
9.- It Preieuti euilko-Yareit in its manufac
we; AransportvisUzage_srkuse..
10. The explosion of powder.mills will in
future be impossible,itol-that of magazines,
whethet ehip•board, will be
at‘rettiftei,ttlielditt.'` •
tine lathe princi
PilltOrrdkig"dlsfriett a Germany, France and
Platl, :wllera it Is being gradually adopted.
.ff
Several trials have been made in
blasting rocks In our quarries, and also at the
"mlneaterPennsylvania—among the tatter at
the Terktirin Obiliery. of Tlrorass',Hull, Au
deniled, • with moat satisfactory' .results:—
rrboie wbb have, tried.. It pronounce it the
beat, they have aver Awed- .
We artderstand.'that Mr. Paul A. Oliver, at ,
the office of Samuel Bonuell, Turk,•
whole agent forlthe,pew.der in this country;
is about Making'
.arrangements for its manu
facture hire.. _ _ .
_
An invention answerieg all the require-
Meats of.the old powder, whilst posmng at
the same time iIOIIB of its diaadvantages and
terrible TIMM and-dangers •in handling,-must
be heralded as a Welcome improvement,. and
•of much berielifin entraining districts, where
such frequent and frightful sodden! occnr
by prentatige 0:4401110011
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TABLE.
[From the New York Tribune
THE DUTY OF 'THE COUNTRY THE
PREOLDENT , S POWER MUST BE BRO
KEN.
. .
We trust the friends of the country will not
be lulled into false hopes; in reference to the
President. . A careful study of his character
and of the'orinciples governing his Adminia
tration makes us feel that as a ruler he is not
to be trusted, , and that he must be watched .
with stispicion and anxiety. -We do not say
a word. in derogation of the dignity of the
Presidential office. That office is ao exalted, •
and its powers so vast and far-reaching, that
we owe it to our children that it should not
be wantonly degraded. The -President has .
degraded it. Ile has made his Administra
don a shameful page in • our history. The
country must , not permit the page to close
without a
,proper rcompense,. Our rulers
may dishonor - their office. We past not dis
honor ourselves.
Andrew Johnson stands forth among pub
lie men as the Gigantic Demagogue of Anse-
rice. :This is saying a good deal when we
consider the manner of men the nation has at
times produced. Aaron Burr, Calhoun, Van _
Buren. Pierce, Douglas, and Buchanan, are
enough for one century. They had redeem
ing qualities—Mr. Johnson has: shown none.
His devotion to the Homestead law, Its Sena
tor, was noticeable. Men did not Fail to see
however, that while this devotion was forced
upon him - by his class he sustained in John
C. Breekinridge a party that aimed to reduce
his class -below the level of the negro slave.
While he professed to give, labor a home. he .
vo'ei to have it sold on the auctlontlock.—
When the War came. he gave the Union
_cause a Mild and incoherent support. In.
,- -this, also, he followed his c!aas, and - we pre-
Isumo he was not slow to follow it by reason
1
of the indignities he received from the-men
' who created the Southern Confederacy. He
was made Military Govtirnor of Tennessee,
and was a roaring Radical. fie ruied his
State with more stet aness than any of our
military commanders. He raved about - the
Union and the negro, proclaiming himself the
Moses of the colored race, its friend. leader, '
and champion. The people made him Vice-
President. Peace came ; and in the 'first
sunny, healing hours of peace this demagogue
roared for - war. The sword bad done les
work ; he - shrieked for the -scafibld. He
wanted a new Jetfries in the South, and
BtodAy Assize in every Stat. The spirit
of Vengeance had no more insi date disciple.
If his advice had beeu 'aka), our victories
would have heen as inhuman as those of Ea- -
enbede and Diaz. God's inscrutable Provi
dence made him President, and the defeat : .
rogue who urged Mr. Lincoln to play the
pita which has been so eminehtly illustrated
by Juarez, himself sought to repeat the trea
sons of Charles the Second aril the obstinate
cruelties of James. Power irinsformed him
from the Demagogue of Rohe:diem to the ~
DemsF,ogue of Slavery. His purblind, nar k
ow vision saw only ih the South so many
electoral votes - that-might 'be "conciliated,, -
and in the North a Democratic party that
might renew the alliance' that gave us Ne r
braska, Lecompton, and the Itebellioo We
had no more of the Moses leading- a' down
trodden race to the' Promised Laud, no more
cries for.vengeauce, no more clamorous ap
pealing, for-blood: The demagogue saw po
litical conventions in the future, with Rebel
delegations holding the balance of power
Unable to answer the high commands of jus
tice. he thought that the naou had a similar
Inability. Imbued with a•- - pri judice which .
bad come to him with his birth and condi
tion, he sought to make it a principle. He
had used the negro for hiaambition, he bowed
to the Rebel that, be might retain power.—
Never in earnest himself about emancißation,,
he could not feel that the country was terri
bly in earnest. - A demagogue in his aonl, he
saw only, in his fellow .Citizfris a nation of'
wire pulling and wire-pulled demagogues.
Men may be, false, but nations never. The
people saw what their Chief Magistrate could -
not see. - 'Every American . gentleman bad
blushed over the exhihitiOn he made as Vice-
President, taking an oath lie was scarcely so
ber-enough to understand. Tills, with'still
later exhibitions , of the kind, was generally •
forgiven. But forgiveness does not always
produce repentance, and the man who reeled
into the Presidency speedily illustrated the
sentiment that strong drink is a devil. A '
demagogue, sober or drunk, is a demagogue
still; and the President was - not slow to'sbow
that the spirit had not left him: -This hamill- .
scion was 'dreadful; but what was the inau
gural address to twenty acts that follqwed,;
to his February speech, and 'his swinging
around the circle. These Were personal -
deeds seen of all men, and subject to the rules
that govern the personal habits of gentlemen.
But we had a President to whom no moral -
test could apply. - Here was a man conspic
uously illustrating those, very - faults" - which
every good father warns his children against. •
Here was a Chief 3lagistratc—the first citizen
of the Republic-for whom all Christiana
taught their children to implore God's special
blessing-; commander of otir armies and na
vies, and , wielding, an atahority - as great - u
that of the Caesars., Yet we blushed for him
and mourned for our gauntry. as 'men in an
cient -days ' blushed for . Comtm)dus and
mourned for Rome. ' • .
The - streim cannot , rise higher than Its
fountain., Sweet waters never come from- a
bitter - spring. If. the woof is straw, wacan- -
not weave the web into silk.- We may sow
the field with tares, and cultivate them ac
cording to the.'moat constitutional methods, •
but they will never grow into wheat. The,
plain fact, knuwn . to all men, sorrowfully
felt and mourned over ',yen to tears, is this,
that a most unworthy citizen sits In the chair
of Washington—that the best interests of the...
country have no more malignant enemy. than
the President—and that, unless the people
save, the country in:spite of their rulers, then
indeed there is no salvation. Pitiful—pitiful,
and Yet Sadly true. 'We lire toda'y surrend
ered over to an Administration which began
with barroom capering, and which seeks to
rule the country very much as the Pewtir
Mug politicians of Tammany hall rale New
York. Congress believed that yea meant
yea, and adjourned under the . influence of
pledges which always govern the • conduct of
gentlemen. Scarcely sixty days have passed,
and . every Pledge has been broken. We
leaned on Grant, and Grant is netitrallzed,
overruled, eliminatcd-,reduced to a cypher.
Hecan protest and plead, but his protests
are scorned, and his entreaties sigh around
the President's ears like the whirls that come
up from the Potomac. Grant is too ingenu, .
ous, too frank, too honest, top aincere and
simple minded to deal with the gigantic dem
agogue that rules him. He pleads for• Stan
ton—Stantou is driven from the Cabinet.—
He begs for his, trusted - Sheridan—the finest
soldier of his time is"sent out to haggle-with
Indian chief; and thieves of the Indian Bu
reau— He demands the right to execute-the.
law •Cougress , specially confided ,to him. -lie
is ,practically told that the President will ex
ecute the law himself, that he- had biter
write no political essays, and ?that•he , titay
devote - his great genius to Quartermasters and
Commissaries, and • mustering•idle Brigadiers
out tirthetlervicti•"CiOngress is away, Grant
is powerless; a Tamminy brdther 'reigns it.
New Orleans, and the President merely paus
es to feel his,ground before he takes another
step, and, still overriding the, expressed law
of, Congresa,.call into power the elements Of
the Smithern Confederacy. ; Wtiere will he •
stop?! •He proclaims himself on the war
path. Retells, his followers that he has put
hie foot 'down. He means, to ”overthrove
' militarfdeapotism and reestablish the Coni . :•.-:
ititntion." , We do not Mistake theati-men&-
Ces, for this man iscapable of anything. to .
hold power. His fate is fixed. • His political -
flat is as certain as any event governed by
the laws of national policy. Hellas betrayed
his party, broken- his pledges, dishonored --
himself, disgraced the . country. Feeling
this, his policy is duperation, and there is
nothing he may not dare.
Let us show bm that he dare not; 'that'
while he has neither ther respect of the people
nor the confidence of any party, there•is
power above him, .heretofore patient - . and
magnanimuos, but which will not allow
hence and magnanimity to becorde
Thin hour requires plain speaking, and
we have sought to speak plainly`, of Andrew
Johnson. .. In the like spirit-we implore our
friends to organize, to enter .into this new
political campaign with the sprit' hat moved'
our fatheri'when they drew sword against.
England,:and which' sent million. of our .
.brothers into the heart, of the proud and.
haughty :Rebellion. Let the Republican par
ty organize in every county - North and South.'
Sink all minor issues in the one great duty of
driving from power this dishonored Adminis
tration. That is the duty of every patriot,
We have spent too much Money, we have
shed trio much blood in the cause of freedom
to stiffer It to be betrayed through supineness
and timidity. We have many things to do--
- ,Presideni-making—thuinces--reconatmellon.
.—tariffs--foreign relations. First we must
destroy the power of this Administration, .and
thus save the mug. After that, Peace.
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