4f101.8 of TUE lIINPiEBS ) JOURNAL. . . TE rNs—€.: 4 2 75 'per annum, pay_able:in advance -63•441 it hot paid in advance. •• • , . • Thvie term: will be Etrictly adhered to hereafter. • TO CLI7IIS:. • Th le one addresr tin advanced .•., . 13 00 " •• . • 4 ' 30 00 inrulst be paid In ndvince: , rov lie ferraelted•tu Cada! and - others cah en delivery. • ' Teachers.will be fundeli ,,,r. .1,,cr..E.a. at $1 de in advance, ur.1.11 . 5 one year full rate!. • ' HATE. -0F ADVIIIRTIMING • .1: ,e, - -i.i,l:nllrStlate, one in.sertion,79cts.; and _ itewrtiotis 2.5 cents. One seasseof ; 7'` for lor 2 insertions $1; 3 - insertions ,übse4 tient insertions, - 22,..ceata . { ter aquero.= 11.1 proportion. " . . MONT/113-IVO. Tatum: att. awitvi.-• Trice lenlS,wiat date. $lOO $2OO - $350 $e 00 ,e.'•,ives. and over 3, 300 400 • 12 00 -,,, i dsres, or 14 lines; n . G ;10. :le 00 , IS en Ttsee " • "It "- .7 03 ' 900 -14 00 .•30 00 Lir 1 , , .,•s over a square; , cents a line.. Special Notf.' 13 per cont. higher. Local Notices; 20centee Leirlincb space is equal to twelve lines; . . Lac .et e . 11 i? , oth.-1,1..5.111,. pr agreement., Nrn • word , . constitute a line. ' .•• • -•.- iv - cirenhtion rif the Jeri-ast ie not eareeded by -sly I,sper published in tbe Siete out of Philadelphia nnd nowLhe largest sheet publbsbed in Pennsylvania. • -• . „ -Wittnn.the 11,st:five years the subscription list waa And It continues to increaSs rapidly. As . at; Advertleingmedjum it is one of theliest In the srtzte, COAL TRADE ADVERTISENI.ENTS. --3 , 1 Terminus of the Philadelphia n. Beading R. R., an theVeLawayit, at Ptilladelp) Ocy Leo. 16,Yt. Bichmond. QIIINTARD, WARD, & CO. • 220 %Vnlnut 'OhOadelphis. COAL OF ALL .KIIPDS BY THE OARGO. Pier No. 17. ROMMEL & HUNTER, 1.-14c•t19Atz-ar.ttza; Fips.f QVALIFIZIS OF AND ._BITUMINOUS OFFP'ES :L205 1-4 Waitiut St., riilndtti, Trinity Building, 111 Brood- Way, New Work, - Roour GS. 21 & 2C3 - Donne tlt., Horton. I ' - , G, f." • BANCROFT, LEWIS & Co.' • lervr.gs AND .... , 111PPEKIII Or THE • • . Celebrated - ASIIILAND• COAL,. •F 1.6111 MAHANOY OM - PVT-111 Street, Coritmercinl Bantling, Phila .• • • York 0111: , -1.1 1 Broadway. Trinity Building, •11•41.31,11 r! I AC SELTZER, Agent.- B, :4on Office r,,,:n0 Sta r;. • (Oa. 23,-IS-43; o:•11 I.IFAVIS AIiDENRIED it CO., )571.010, , 5ie Dealers in the beat varieties of Anthracite and. Bituminous . Coals; . r2:16 Wall', a t :Street, Philtidelphla OFFICES: wilt: Bm ad wk. ' ', New•Yorlr i I 1;101by • - Pioneer Shippers from 11izobethpprt, of SPRING MOUNTALN, HAkICTON, AND coIINCIL SUDGE•COAIS: • r. , 59 IS- pier Ito. 10 Port liichmond. -JOIHN r. 1 T,IE ilk BO Nt 4-;IIIPPERS OP COAL, No. 316. Walnut Street, Philadelptia; DXCINAS.FOR E-1 4, 1:ita. AND BALL or No. 3011 NV , 'stirtee.ufh St.; New TLsd A.v,.nne and 'Forty-ninth St., New York, Windf..Prnvidanceollaale Island. AUDENREED;:NORTQN & Co.;. Mincra and Stdppors 'or; 0 L LA)CCIST 34011 NTA from. HAzzi. Dru.. Cotltareir: • fl eAM OKI N-,frma Ibmt: PLISE COLLIEWY. . • Et) R E'S CREEK CUM BERLA NT),-from ttle Con. 60IDATirts 'MINIM OF MARYLAND. . • ,32t.,..W:f1":1L ;?(DRIL Philadelphia. OFFICES:. ;I II) 111 - 011,imy, New York • •.. ( 27 Doh:!e Street, Boston. -• April 7 •G 3 JAMES M. REED, Doane. St., Rostim.._ 'ANTHRACITE AND. BITUMINOUS COALS . •':', FOLE....AGENT, :FOR EASTERN MARRET, OF ;,1121 , o'vey; Bullkley • &.111o:•, Miue'ra anikShlplieit of • Prv%gou Coat: .. • . . Jo I. n'.3l.wry.. . alum alid ship j)trd of 114ilbrfon C0a1... - . .- • Igoe ;?5, • ' • • , .°2-. ' PIIILAPEL.VIJIA;: - &€: SC Pi ti V ALKi NAYktfiFATICI.N. Shipping Wharvei for OTHRACITE COAL at Delawaraißiver, Plillada; ' :ILI3WIS CO.; AGENTS FOR TILE SALE OF THE • • -.- Wolf Creek Diamond Coal Co,'s-Dia7 • - tiotil Red Ask.. and - Black „Heath White Aft Goals. • (2115 Wal mit' St revt,rblifidelPlllA. OFFICE.. 110 Brieldwpy. New York. 1 . 14 liJiby,etreet. .. • . . Feb 17, •CG • • -..• ' • AV - bort - No: 2. • . • icEPI'LIER - 41c Eno: • • . . • rig, K. cur. Walnut Fourth 01 , 11t.1N Pir.e..strki, New 'York. . • I - Merchants! Bank Building, Providence. DAVIS" rEAp.s()N Cci., • • stirais - ANT) PHIPPTBIS . 'MBA T L,Of Ttit MOUNTAIN - .*lll'MAtig and 81'01IN VEIN •-• REDBI - 1 . .0"0 A L . • INo. Wainnt'Street,Tiiiindelphia. OFFICES: ' o .1111troadway,•Thlom No. 9 Trinity Building, New Tork' • 11 Donne Street, Sodom.' . DEIAWARE, AVECNOE. API 1 , 7:A100W . • EMANUEL BAST, itIMILLND. -D'AV_T,.. FAZE 1 . & -'0..9;, SHIPPERS OF LEHIGH, LOCUST MOUNTAIN, SIIA LOROERRY, BITUMINOUS (bear Valley Shamokin , • Agents_ for ATreek's Col Locust - AIL Coal. • (I'l var ith Wilkesbarre Coal. •• ()nice, No: 3:33 Wallint Mt., Pia ilnidelPhis. Xls,"• 11; ' •' • . • 19- TVT A la 0 'EH VEIN CO*SOLIOA WE D. COAL CO. - .0,:r lIICK(WY and .111:0AD 141.0ErSTAIN COALS. arcli..,w sold exclii;ilvoly by DAY, 11U.DDELI. . A: 4P-11V. . . . PArti,s ordorinz from tbom, .may' always 4epepd open ref.:!.•iving a pare article. .. ~ .. - - A... 11. ALMON, . Treammer. - . Fbilwleiill2la;lSh rob `67% .-. : •.. . ' - S-tt CAIN, HACKER 4 COOK, C3l:=E3 - . . . LOCIUNT • ifi.ILP, - • • .. . . • • . • - LOCUST •MOUNTAIW. • . . -, • - - ' -•-• ' 'BILAIVIC UEATII. Also, deale rs in °the* that qualities o • . . -.- . -.- WHITE AND RED ASH COALS. • • . No. 214. Wulunt Street, Philadelphia, and Woodland Wharves, Settuylkill River. - • • ' . . . . Tiromm , 04 , ..• • trioßam 11,7Krn... • Jrsas M, 030 K, 101I\ B. bTRYKER, Shipper and Agett, Selplkijl Haven, Pa. R-13 , • FeLilian" 14'62 BROAD TOP. GEN.V.RAL- 4IFOCE 50,.!, = BROAD TOP WHITE ASH gilmi-BOtnminotis C 0 A 1.4 S No. -. 164 WALNITT STIIEEZ' PIatELADELpgr.A. - ROBEitT BARE POWEL, manage I.7ONIsTECTING OFFICZEI:• - I 6 'E'rstreler 'Buildings, Bogdan, Mann. • ; :Ms Trinity Feb. 1.1,413 141 LYKENS:VAMY, Lykens Valley Franklin Rea Ash . The mndereigned havinO. -the.. erclngliv agency for Fale of the above Coal, are flow prepared • to Ittridsh• the New York and •Eastern trade a largely increased . s amity of the celebrated .• . . ... .•, : • , . •1411 cal Valley liranklia ..Itia Aait Coal. ,This coal,' from Iu• irony; free burning and lasting' onalitiocla acknowledged lobe the beet•RW Art , l . .. . . . .. . . . .. Arrangements recently.inade will- ample OS to offer' this coal to the trade at raore'.advantage6ne rata than ovorboioreand more nearly approximating the price iffangemehts. Ituve been • coinpletetl at Port Bleb-. mond bir the shipment of the above- - coal Smut . the • turves of Messrs.' SI.V.EICBQON & CO., and Meters: tb-oNIMEL & LIIINTER, to whom customers for this •• al may It ppli or. direct vepseis. • . • J. (.; MOOD & C0., - G2'' . .frtutty Banding, Net. York. WALLACE & MOODY, 11 Doane St., Boston.. • May iS. , er , • . 20-714 •.• I.f num!: Eurniahinig • !laid:ware ..and kitchen utenaila in great iiiMety. on band at . T1R.1017 , IL COPS. Pottairillo.• . • ... Zi co TJ Q17,.-.1:I".150 AND CUT FLOWERS FOR BALE AT GREENWOOD NIIRSEIT 1740 , . . . . ~ .. - . • .- - . .. ' - . ..:..- -•—:. •:-. --. ... ..-.. .'. -- -- - -*-.T:4- - " ;----,*, Ef-r - i' - ':j" - . ---.. . Ag.f 4- - --- _,-. -- --- - ,. -- t' .. -c. .. j ..'; i .. , -, .--- F.,. - • •. * .- .-.- '.. , .... • .- . - . . ..... - . • _ . . ~ . , ~, , _ • .. _ -.. . . -.., .. '• . 4 ;:- - ; :;, , z;;. - is ' 4 . ' 7 l''' te ,-;,•\ ,; , - - -../.: -- .... -. 5 .. ` ' N.L.-„ "'- ;- ' ''. ' ' - ' l- '" •' _ ' '. • • , '• • • '.. . .. . . . . . , . , . . . . •. . , . ... . ....- .. • ~;.., T .. . 7: - ....z . ;:i :1.. . :4_ .,.. 2 , - . 714:,...._ ,...., . \ .1:. 7 . .. ,...,,, .... 4.1.2.4... ... r:r:... -:, t,.... , i i . -.: , ... „ 4,... 7. ~ . : . , .. , . , - E • 3 i i - - . . . T. - • AND. pornsviLL F4 - .•_ :. :.,-..;......-..-;.:,....- _.,--.... :!.,,,,._ --_ , .._.:-.........i•.,-,. , „1: : ,-;,...1- 7 -4-,....--.,:r_ ......_,.-- --. ,_ ~.. _ ...1• . 1, • G PUBLISHED: - EVERT:::-S.ATTIRDAT:MORNING.:: BT . :BANN A . L.::81.....RA11.5EV,-:- . .P OTTSTILIA,:•'SCHITYt - RItA.LtGO.II.N.TIPENNSYLVANIIk. : .••• :.:.: ~.:.......,... -,:-.- .:...• -......-.......- - ••• :_....:‘ i ••-• : . • .:.: ...• .• ..-..:.,-..: . .-, '..:••: ~. ...•••. .• • ..-... • ~..- .....:, -,• --•, ,•.. ..7.' .•..."..::.•• : ' ::. . - ::::•.-..- '.,,, .. • • . . :• • - ..: -..:- .. ._- - - •,,„ . -. • • - " . • .. -..-- -:. • '-- :_:.• '.. -, - 1- . • -, .Vol: -~~~_ NOTICE. . WE have appnintodiVasra. UAITEIIETT & 217 wAusruT STRUT, PaII:ADEL, PrilA. sole Agents for the sale of .one - • MUTER BROOK LEHIGH COAL, ' • From Port Rictimorid. Philadel lIOSIEBc LONG4TitEET, Dlisters: 1311ier Break, Feb 21, 15417: :. : . 11A14)ff.E . T . T 4 !:. &.--' N...:1 4 - Ti , Walnut Si:, Philadelphia, FOR SALE,the FOUL WTN6CELEBRATED ANTTiBAC.tTE 'C OAL 13 raw( roar.a.lomiozrn SILVER BROOK; .(Lehigh.) SITENANBOATf CITY, . ()Me AAh.) mined by Miller & Maize, SPORN • ' • - 'and DIAMOND VEINS, (Red Ask). Also BITUMINOUS and ,CUMBEELL'iTI. COALS , . • • or well eutabliebed reputation. • Piers ILS andl9 - Port. • . OFFICES :—Pror-AniteniA, 217 Walnut St. • • .• • New Ynaz, Rooms, Trinity .Building. - : . Paoymzi:oz, Weyboaset Street: • . 13cm:on, 25 Doane Street. • . March 2, 'G7 • 2 ,, tt • OAETNER; . GTIOZNEY : & WELLINGTON .• • , Miners an4 . l•Stiippers . of 11 urnaide (fronytheirlumeide Col. ataamoh'nj • `Lewis *rein (Red AM). * • . Locust lllOnntoin (White Ash). • • ..• • • • {39 Trinity.Berldhie, New York; . OFFICES 215 Welton Street, Philadelphia. , • • 15 Kilby Street; Beaton, WhariNo.l3, Part Richmond, Pliiindla, Feli24, '66 [Nay 16065 7 29-U1 • 8 . H. EASTWIOK, 1111: 121 11 ; ALNET STREET, iHILARC, WHITE 'and RED ASH COAL, • Agents for the sale of thprelebialed: - .N.S IRE .. .:QCP A t F T iom the Lake. Fidler Colliery,' Shamok in. Marcia 16, '6i' •- , 11.4 y: . . • • BORDA., 'KELLER & NUTTING, . . • Wholesale-Deaiers in Best Varieties of • '• ANTURACITE &. BITUMINOUS COAL. .•.. . . . • • . 327 Walnut Street,•Philadelphia,. . • ' OFFICES: . 42X Rilby Stteet, B4ton. Room 64 Trinity Building; N. Volt. • - - 11rIllole Agent's for West Lehigh Gieett- - wood -Coal •and Coal from, the Local& Mountain'Colliery-of the Mammoth Con ..olidoted.Coal Company. ".• • ' • • .GEORGE . CREEIC. BITUMINOUS on board at Balti more or Geoitretown. . • [Aug 11; ,G 6.1 lITANDU,SEN, LOCIINIA.N:: Qt Co.; LOCUST MOUNTAIN. LOCUST OAP, 'Wr1L1ER.5.33.9.11. -. . , - • ; • WHITE AND .. .RED ' ASH.- COALS • AgentS for the sale of thie eMebrated George. Creek Cumberland Coal, from the Mines of the Con solidation Coal and iron Companyof Maryland. - Pt. Richmond, : • sirprith wnAisti3 Elizabethpora, • . 0 Baltimore, . •". • : . . r2Ol Walnnt street, Philadelphll. • Osartevat 4 Trinity Building, New York.. " . • ". • • • .( . 15 Doane St.,. • - NEW YORK. TACKER; HEALY & C 0:,.,..; uttorea f,rtrertes Or Lehigh. Schuylkill. Wilkesba.rre, Lackawanna. Cumberland, and Elk 11111 Gias Coal- .. - Company . OFFICES.— 20 .Nass.in St., Nev' York. • • eon 'Walnut Eif - -.-Philadelpida..r . . • Kilby Street; Boiton: . . . Oetober,l4, .66 .• ELIZABETHPORT. COAL. COAL. . A.. •T. STOITT, . ' Miners and Shippers of the celebrated ••• . : qultoiL":. ck, Stout' .(Lehigh)...Q.dalg, Pronitheltbervale Colliery and the Stout • . ° near Hazleton', Pa.; • And Dealers In the • best Varieties of AiTHI[ACITE AM) eitunolits cons:- • Delivered direct from the mines or on bOard of . ves- TRENTO*, N: J., • ELIZABBTHP4RT, N. d. N. BRUNSWICK, N. J.,.. PORT- ItICIIMOND; PA.• .". OFFICES,—d4 46*Triaity. Banding 11l Broadway, NOW York, . T. Brous." • 8. yAlt !Thema, April A; i 64 e.• illanufactuti•envor Oil and Crindles; and Dealers in furriers' Oiti.; • liiINEES' OIL IN OA SE.S ANDNABRELEI • • Always on hand and tor sale at the very lowestmarket Nsw Yoax-1154 Front . St., : corner Malden. Lane. WAITSTILL'HASTINGS. New York. , • JOHN HASTINGS, New Bedford • • B. BANNAN, Pottsalllerwill supply ourolls Ml:man ufacturers prices.' . • . Alansrsetory at New Bedford. • • • • ... New York. May IS. 117 . • .2.0.1 y F ll{ :('LAMS COLLIERY Tor Lenses: executors of. Janiim Drindits, dent, and the' executors of Wm. Richardson, - devil; offer tor lease the Peaked Mountain Ccilliery on-the. - "Catharine Groh.- tract, sitnate in Foster:Township, Schuylkill County, Penna. nitwit* will grant the right is mine on the north dips .of - !the "Big Orchard," - “Holmes "Crosby or Mammoth,".• Alkidmore,”. and "Bock Mountain" 'Veins. Also, the right to, establish a new colliery - on the basin. between the peaked Moon.: taro and Mine - 11111, and work - all the veil* of the basin on both dips—and likewise all Coat above. water level on the adjacent lands-of the Forest Improvernent - Com-' pany, between certain points. The. Peaked Mountain ColPery . is worked by: two shafts, and the improve -m.ents, consisting of hoisting engines..ne* large- Cr.r resh engine, purrips. miners. houses,. &C:,Etc., are all in excellent, condition., This most desirable proper ty will be leased on liberal terms. : ' • . The owners will make alsatisfac tory arrangement' with a good lessee for building - o. . tirst class BREAKER. Further intormatton and exhibits of -pram Icarveyn, &c, will be given to responsible parties on application to THE EXECUTORS OF JAMES DUNDAS OR W]l. NICHARDSON.4OO Prone street, PIIDELSIL; . or to • . CHARLES M. HILL, Await, Pottsville: TOO& L. ADDISON. FRANCIS WARREN. . To Coal:Dealers Gas Co's &o y .THE nixiertHigneil laving succeeded Focht & War rrn In . the sole - manufacture of Focht% .Celebrated Patent foisting Scopp Buckets, And IRON HOISTING 81.06103, 'as well an In the . . • • •.•2i in Cars ma. • • Iron Ban' • O r WIEIXELBABROWS, . Are prepared to all: all orders with promptness and dbmateh. • Norms:- - -Being the sole owners Of , the Patent Right for the Self-Dumping, Hoisting, Scoop 'Bucket • and DOck - Block, we caution all persons against manufac turing or pinthasinglhe some from •any except, our-. selves or agents, as we will prosecute to tne utmost limit, any Infringement on the -Loiters Patent, • ADD &WAilitErtif; ReEdinff, .Awat. In, JOHN R. DIEH M, . ,COA.L..-SOREENS i. Of ' iaatest WOK Apireve Tat d The tniderelinid aohnti e priCtiCSl . & Seen MAlllthle taxer, Winona Coal Apetatore and other* at he la mandseinitng anew COAL; SCREEN,: patented: June 21, 1564, and - another.AP. -tented_ _4n.W.B, HE GUARANTEES .THAT THE 11::+. 1 WILL,AL, WAYS RETAIN ITS OEI(3 HMI, RE ,-- He .113 , ii0.0141.31211111Cei palm * eoßbowally dOHNIr. • Rama et., wit f of *ate/ HAW pm; 4 11-44- . ": . • rAt:_ - . . • - - . - • -I kn Pier 19 Port Ilielitssemd: JOHI~T. C: SCOTT . 436 • SONS; • MAPLE: DALE' COAL, And dealers in ()filer appioved• - quaiithe- of White and'Red Ash Anthracite, and panibarland • • "Ptilledeiphla,:lio: 2 6 Nt'islnnt. No.,Grigg Building. OFFICES'; S N. 1-„ No:'lt9 Itroadway; Waltei, Bros„ • I . & Agents.. • . k,Boeton, N0..11 Doane StTeet. • • . Feb . Wallace.:••• ! Agents. Dow. M. S. Bto4a.r.*: Eranataa; •DOVEY-1131:111CLEY'da CO • .•• • • . . JOHN. ." • J; .- DOVEY.' SON d 5 CO -- • . r. DOVE; x. 11,.litTLJELrlr,W1C.KrNIMIOX I . I ..r.DOrn) . . ..:Miners and Shippertof the Cetelwatid • . PRESTON AND 'CIIEREEITON ... • Whigf 20.- . Port Richmond.. • . •- • • OFFICES i : • . • , • .PHILADELPHiA.4IO. 436 Walnnt St: .NEW YORK—TrInIty , BalltUng, ROom .N 0.66 ; B. - A: Aechtemacht, Agent. . . . BOSTON—JAS. VI Reed, gent, No;"1 - ,9: . Doan WASHINGTON, It: C.-H. Jones; .Agent. • , . Piey No. y 4. NEW YORK & SOMMEELL COAL Oct., BROAD MOUNTAIN, BLACK HEATH, AND SUPERIOR RED .Al3ff -COALS. . • • . " • "I 26 Exahange,'Place,.New York. OFFICES F 221-Walnut street, Philadelphia. • J ..C.. Thwing & Co., .Agts.; TT State St., . Boston.. '5B 43- 2 . 22226222 ? .2222 r T. BOWUB. r.; A. ziAeox: .131CKSOECER1 • DOWNS • . 6 4• 1 ' - ••• • . 'MINERS AND SIMPP)* Pi? , •. • .• • • • • -• • • • • V • A Office, 13,Oing. 34, Einpire Building _ 71, Broad' NFay,. NEW YORK. • WHAEVES : NO. 4, Port Richmond,. Philo, Foot • of 20th - River, • • NewVoirk. • •• • • . ApHI • . •• April 21; 14-tf. • -•,.• druirra..OI3iBIIIPIMIA or :.• . ANTHRACITE Ac BITEHINOUS tar Sole .Agents for the Sale ofthe Carmalmai LO. OUBT MOUNTAIN. COAL, from theCptrtallk,COlLlaltlr. cis:--..31 . 1 Walnut Steak, Philadelphia. :..• • •111 Broadway, N. V.; and - •••• • :• 3. Donne Street, Boston. Wharves:—Windmill htlond,.Phtla: ; P.ort'Rlehmond, LOU:UKRT. tATO. LOCUST 1110TETAIN - COAL Shippirs of other approved qualities of WHIT AND RED ASH . . . 919 Walnut Street, Phßalielphla. 9 Trinity. Building, New yo r k. • .• Cor. of WI &.Doane Street, Boston. `JA 111 IEI3 J. .CON - NE • •.,.. Miner and Itipper of ,the Celebrated •LOCUSTMODITTAIN COAL Pottsville, lilehuylkill 'County, Penna. , 1669 • • • • • • • J. FRECIC., • MINER ANIi SHIPPER OF TEE cmi,m33P,_A_TE,7D Centralia or Locust Mountain Post Once Addrettri, ASHLAND, Schuylkill °may, Pa., or Ocntrulia, Column+ County. THE HILL & HARRIS COAL, WS TI&VIL APPOIMILD Messrs.' t[O3IIIIEL & • • 204 . . • Our .exclnsice Agenti for the sale'of our noel, along the line of the Schuylkill, in the cities of Philadelptis andiklew York, and'in the Easterti..lliarkete--.to whom all orders should beadAreseed. • • " ' • By continuing to prepare our coal in the *Kir user mAiniza; we hope to 'retain out old 'customers . and secure new ones being prepaied 'to do a. largely "creased business this year. . HILI7OLZARRIS.. • Mahanoy ' 'COMO ".. & )314.14iY0N: . . WHITE 'MID BED 'ASH COAL : :• - OFTOSIIITI UNION LI AL:I4, POSTIWiLLE, PA, ' • • August io; VT' . -..•• • • -32;tf ." EAIST . Bit& MILIAN L 0 BBslt II Y VEITI COAL. • ' . .. -.-• . • - My Bait Franklin - Lorberry Coal is now sold exclu sively . by Nevem. CALDWELL, GORDON & Co., who are my sole Agents, . Partles ordering from 'them. may always dep end 1 -14 .777 uPo l l if e s t i t r i a: l tCPtlttiphia. OFFICES 2 4. 111 Broadway,. Trinity Bulking, New York. -' • N0:144 State Street, Bey': ." Tremont, March 21062 ' . ' - ..- IS- ' • .A.N . LEASE.—The. Schuylkill Coal Company are t now prepared tO make leases on their lands in Fosteerownettip, Bchuyildll Courty. - These lands are located on the very best -portion of .the Heckacher Ba sin; having over four miles ran.= the Daniel, Crosby, laalor, and all the 'veins known in that basin, both &hive and below Water leveL Favorable leases with an.abandmice of timber for mining porpoie n , wall now .be made to .good tenants,. on'appllcation to H. H. BODY. President of. the . Comptiny,. No. B Wail Street, New-York. - . June SR. .66.-25:. • .• THOS. HULL it CO., - MOM SPSHO mows LEHIGH - COA-14 Yorktown, Carbon: Ceunth Pena. OFFum 323 WALNUT IStreet,Pidltulelpilla; JEANESTlLLlWlnizerserClotrarty, Pat. LounEsav aoAL. _ . , . CWe,.t he un&mitigned, having ermsolidated .onr Tttree solicit es in the-Lorberry Region, will hereafter new act ourbariness under the name of - - . • . • NILLREt, GRARTI a Co. • • NIffuJ•RW SUMS & Co. • • .. GRAM'? & NUTTING.- ' • lir. GRAIN"; a member emir firm, having arm& ted himself with J. R. BLAB:DIMON,. will maids in Philadelphia and all onr coalshipped by tide.water will •be under. the exclusive control of BLI4GBITOpi, ,By increased eareani attention . is prepaiati, we hoep.to maintain the repnbitien 'scour celebrated Lor berry Coal. Purchaaers abroad can 'rely upon having tab mai ihipped in the best order. • ' • • - 0114101 0 iCO. INDIA RUBBER GOODS. REDUCED. PRICES. liannfactilreis Agency; 708 Chestnut ' , Machine Belidng, Steam Pacldng, Hose, &c., and all Bobber Articles:adapted to X...tmloti and•Manual:Mr ring purposed. Druggists , and Srattonerr Article% Boats, Shoes, Ckottdog. &c.„ at. lowest Factory Priced. List of Priced sent on application. EICSIBL LEACH. lb-am April 1L '67 13ALANIANDER SAFES, Second. Pottsville . . Annowires - to the badness crunmenity of Oda md'unalaw c zettek__ _that' ha unnuaa- 1 tares SAM at Ml' Mee and f— linda; Instituted Fll,•lnvokivhteb, impala: et, wa ds; and fintationlrecenirre with- ihoseob.: tateedtmt any other establishment fn , the tatintry,!- Healy:aye imps silts onhand for see; wila - maw them any aim far Banking - end other 'Petals inattbs-1 tkasik as Map, If not cheaper thantheynanbenbtfted! Se referstalieriandithierge.BrttA a _Th o*._i Gmb and A. Asodurpon. , ef Ude Hoseea Ida Sidia ' .000 ill 'I. . . I VUI teach you to please the Bowel" of the. Earth, and bring out front the Wrenn of Nototidna Iffetals Which VIII give atrength to our hinds and inklect. all Nature to Our use and pleasure.--pa. JOILISON! ~'~--~ blpilent of lifUwultea, icpszits AND EIHIPPLIII 07. ROTHERMEL & SHANER, COA_LSI Pier No. 15.• ' BLAKIBTON, GRAEIT - k 00., SCHUYLKILL CO. LEHIGH. LORBERRY CREEL atiaciowlyge AlliaaWbetaree; Cii4UMMI iMMMis auincriarmal. or SALTIURDALY". - MORNING, CiOTOBER I'2, 1867. HARDWARE. LEWIS TIIONTSON & Co.. DEALERS IN: HARDWIRE,. itILEIIY,' IRON, TOOLS M., oaten* iaixritt A5l hus . sir,"gurize - or- Tar., returipe, Pa. Muth 17, .6.8 BRIG:-1-1,T4i ILMIDWAREI&TRON...:DEAURS,- --. •:: - . I3POKES, TELTIQES -13HAETI3 • HATCHET. AND HAIDIEN'HANDEES, : MINERS' PICK H ANDLSS - ; . • . . MII . DPICK -HANDI.IOI, •• • . '• • ••• • .•SISDG.I3,II4NDIX,S. • : . -• Or Factory in Italtroad • Street. -• Store: in .Centre &feet, Pottsville, nelirlvepposnotho Miners' frank . • IRON AND STEEL, FLAT dr. ROITIVII WIRE ROPE, _ • for Inclined Planes, SHIP RIGGING. Etc, Eta., . • AND ALL DESCRIPTIONS DP WIRE, F.llAZA.Ull),ltlauck Chunk, Carbon Co., Feb 2S, ocT • . 14-1 r , BRIGHT & CO., DBALSRB IN . etttlery, , . Tools, ltu3s, &0.. &o. NEARLY OPPOSITE THE RIVERS' 'BASH Pottsville, Pa. • Sept. • 1, 68 36. Great Rush FOR: -' - . • .2102. • CRNTRE; . !..isummEa..--::sTocIK,I. THE -NEW YORK . CHEAP 1)R Y GO - OD Srto E. 150 iress Patterns SCO Yards. Muslin $240, Worth. 1.00 Dress Patitinp $3.50, Worth $5.; 75 Drees Patterns $1;50, Worth $6.50 MOHAIRS, POPLINS, LENOS,. GPNENADINES Wool de . Laines, &c., &c., PEEL CENT. - D121101102 /2011 REGULAR RITES. AN.OTH.ER NDDUOTION In the rates of • STAPLE .AND DOMESTIC GOODS:. ONLY 18 Cents A - COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF Ticks, Denimi. Towlings, perms, White Goods, Ent-, broideries. Skirts, Corsets, Notions. Dos iery, etc., etc.; etc. AN ADDITIONAL RYDIICTION OF. 15- PEA Fiona Oar F,orssier : _ 4 l.o.W. o Prices. CALL. IN TIME TO'SECURE - BAEGAIHH THE OHELP lIEWAY.OIIX PRY _gooD. g'ORF, • • ' • ,X. .0 AL LAND 'Sr. CO., Nil 210 Centre, corner -Norweglin oppeeite the Mortimer House., . And{ 20, . Ang, 24-6* DIE:HIiV .&' -.0-LE.-.lt . L' S. PATENT SLATE FIGUR, Thiel la Warranted to remove all' flat and iefoie stuff from coal milt pasties through the breaker..'lt is teed at Coady Collieries throughont:che Won with, perfect eattefaction.We refer to Jae.- Lanigan, Pottsville: John H. Dew , eels, Shamokin, :and Henry Heil, :Tremont,, who have the Pleher In nee. Addresa: DICEY .86. ON-4,l4'.*liminix-ri, Jan.l9, CHAS. STOKES. B. T. TAT.I.O2* . .For' the conwirdence team patron/14nd others at a &Minim we here present diagram of self-mesanretnent.: by which a ending w th il e l d b a e m nt n e dor -d;b designated in , theansoinPanlitig laPtatA'rlON: l • YEASIMS: FOR COLT ? Lew/the/ Bask,. &can 1 to 2, Ind from '2 to S. - 7 - Length ortilleeve, faith am -.croaked.) itom 4to 5. ' Amid Msorurs.--Aronnd the met prominent - part of the falst keartsre. , --Around the . . . . . . . . wail&.: Btate :. nhether . the persOil fe acct or 40144%4 • Tha same measure aa for Coat Measure insideeemn, and Mite . . . . side from hip-Ixme, and around ,' waist ma hip. Drams .M.Lsmusta Ewe NV MAIL" VI as Of COST. .0001* Wa wereamenor No: aszsrioroar. • ' • CHAO. STOMEMS do Co. • S114:11011esamot ss., ' Ptilladelpbite, ;.-WALRE.—Plckla Jacey_ t =p - Jan L., w Jams, Batter •Diabee, Cake Sa /C 4) ritchapb ..1311ver Tobacco Beim Mail with gold. • .-11. GIUDIN, . • cbartotAL.. Pneboripa - LEXIIIIIMBH, of rettsti i lMM dealer In MUM MUSICAL' PIANOS; MMLODSORIP, ORGASELlx. s .beattA. been eivAeteti WI bent kw the ofebilted . • . lei u illionlites Cabinet Onus,. to the County of 'meld wweectfallyen noinell to , the modal unkozwitity thit he out tarnish thew uneettilled favorite ()abbot Organs; hi *di styles fad sizes; isiondicturetr prices: The quality and whams diode, with empower of enrepion In thew engine, is wohi!ii4iiiiadialred and - - padsed, white their pettahlArlbeat=l &dish wake tbon tionotoet el . .. Every - Pam Main One: TSB CABINET OiCGANS ire'inapted toPAW LIWOURCILRB AND SCHOOLS ' i inry in Wasik= 11111111 to fil/49 amok torltirery liostrureett Worritiated;' • Allo t Along for the age of the in* opolird gpring itelignani b e tbs. (beide. of /fortinunlerland:end labiOon, whlclilestrnments are trulansilliellitat -- Thiel peones asedaestind hinnese;of. tone. which lie received the limited Commendalion. the medal le=siand lancet an alnicetimprecedented seht. ore aspOr all zr Invited torsil-said Tee lot lbereselvats cornamakeilons • and ardor cdfl be =unsocial or Illied.and eierc r inke. Slant wdlAeealioProe,.t C tto %areas Cat-. Immairmigibar-doontfrowialtantmio; 01104,2etti -4111141%1 •-- -•- • - FOR :• , SALE: - &: TO..ILET. . ~_ . . PUB.' *SA tAk.—The" &Ceiling . rm• n o*. co ido tx t -1-'• by John - S. Gnihani in lintrie Addition --la Poeminn'givezt immedinteiT• • Addres .. .. : • • -.. • • PRANK CARTER, : . • . . . ~ Real Ditate Agent, Mahrinoy City, Penni.. ' U° E MALE. --%cral - trac te o. tCoalrd T on Land'inColorad.iitbliatmnttenthleofyen: . . ver., comprising in the aggregate abont Iwo Lb' mid. acree, and &mem to coat in ab nt'eight . nallen of coal . .veine, %Oen the F ame 'anionnt of iron ore:. For part.lca lare riddft , er • •W. A. 11EISq.R., Denver, Colorado. • . Vt 00. B.ILE properly of Goo. N'4" . oniei 1: Third. street,: in the • Borough: of entisistins_ . of tray Deuble•-Frente .Honserci one Double Frame House on the rear of lot prop... city on Third*St. . Termi And.conditione made hioMin by: • . JAMES WOCIILEY,'New Philadelphis,• : • or byOEOROE WOOLRY. orl the premises. . • . • . • . • ?S if. Volle TO .:LEAINE...ei tram' of land situate half a inila tvest LleiVellyn,"in Breich and Reilly townships, Schuylkill Comity, con jaining 430 acres, having st: mil- 'of three-fourthe of a mile on the following veiny .vie: The Gate Veins," Bel kirk:l:thick Minn; Tuntiel.Faust and Salem. pa z ti es • - JOSITIJA LTPRINcATT wio,ine4.o purchase pr . to . lease" %mince application to • ; • •, • .. . RICRARD.SALLifiIiRST. • RUNDAS LIPPINCOTT% areeatera of the Eitate of 'James Dundee, deceased:: "- • • • atl2l.W.eilnut Flt.; E6ilada., Or to CHARLES M. gru. Rao Estate T0WN11.41)T1.4 '.the moth Vein Coal Company' s. Addition • to the .Bor ough of St - Clair,Schtlylkill - Crilinty! . pe gna.. Thet3 , lots-are located on theAtiti Creek and are convenient 'to all the Mill Creek Collierimi pull to - the: celehrntad 'Black Band Iron Ore Vein. which, m uow fully devel oped at the Shaft of B. •NV, McGirines on the Nam; moth-Vein Coal Co.'s land, , and. said by enitipeteitt Judge" to be the best lion. Ore yet discovered in - the. State. •No doubt .xtrensivelPrunaces.., Rolling' Mills and Steel - Works will Shortly be erected on the prover ty.- The Mill Creek and Mine' 11111. Rallroad.passes thrOugh the property. giving facilities and convenienc: ea.PA all kinds of bushatta. For terms, apply A. ILART. President, •. . . . . • Nor. 4311 Library St, Philadelphia; , . or to JOHN . ,SELTZINCiEIt, Sect - 1 . , St. Clain:: ALEA n 1 ,E.11 IAINEiO4.I4 . T.AND.A.ND V• 1148E11 PROPERTY FOR MAIL.E.- The undersigned offers at private sale • the well known Basireprimerty, known: asPrineetriPin,• on the' Delaware and•Raritan CanaL consisting of nearly five acres, together with extensive, coat and lumber yards' and Sheds. . To parties wishing to engage in the cent and l im b er 'burners, the above-'property, offers in. ducements not often to bemet with.. as averVberivj , business Istransacted,bere: bet, kof a central pasition between Trenton Mad:Neil , Drunswick,,a largeeountry trade centres here.. The property is in good . Tlie wharfage and rent of that part 'which is not•meh.. pied to carryon the-businesre will nearit pay the in. 'on the•cost of the prOPerty. 'Having been dare- Iv confined to business I. g• b n years past, it is thy de sire to rellnquiSh ,'as there Is necesSity - ftir my carrying -it on any lhoger; is, my reason for offerieg it .for sale. Terms will Le made arclunmodating, and ixissetisinii given at any time. Parties desiring any further inforniation can obtain it by addrftvitm-me at Princeton, N. J.,-ur by calling: Mies me at Princeton Basin. . A, NV. 11.11I1'IN, Princeton, June 10, 'O7 - • ' 24,.. .• E it AT . • PRI . V A . V I A U T A E R k a i I I I T E. R ..gn P e--tw i e t nt-leth interest thy tract of coal tend in New Castle Townilitp, .Contity (kndwn as the PeltA Pannan.. - tract) . contain- . Ing - abing 420 acres.. • • . • • - A tract•of . /9.0 acres of COIL and 'll3lBElf LAND in Riley. Townehtp: . ' ' • . ' . Lot on corner of N.QtiVIZIIIII and Ith Streetit. about. 120. feet square, frith two two-story brielt bowies there on., Will be sold lbw. .. • . • . . - Valuable {bnilding , lots on. Coal, Washington and Maliantongo streets . . DeStrable sites tor warehoasmk, manufactories; ,k,c. A aplerdid lot on Stlmylki ll nne, 3$ feet front. oh Ave.M . the Avenue and 57feet front on Chnrch.A.lley., •.-. - • .,. . ~. .. , - One-fourth interest in the "Cold II ill" Trict 'or land, 'in Schuylkill Tomnshiii,,to eime lie estn:e of the late M M. Sarah Bart.. - .; : • . • .. . ;.' The properly, contain ng aYtont rite serrs of coal and tlmber-land, is the tmee from' which l'; ley. FISK. Esq . ., mined:his gel ebrated.'Fisk's .Fam i I r It: is sup. posed that the "lief:Rh - nes Islarlt it,,nitlce." and .the Limestone' Vein;. formerly workel nnar• Middle Port, run through this tract. • Will tte.sold . • Apply to . ' "• RUssaL, ' • Real Eillite and Inherence Agent, airier rit.uild and gahantongo Sts.„Pottinfillh. P4.'• '- • • Mirth t 4. , 68 • • • • . 124! . . . k LARGE LOT OF MINING IVERV -FOR SALE. • Steam Engines of the following ilimenwlons and power: One IS' inch cylinder, 72 inch etrolwi cO-home power: One lff.. " : " 45 " ". 50 " ' " Orie - 14' ' .'4 o "'' ' " "40 " . "• - One 12 •• • .••." .. 24 " " • Otie'SX'"••• . ' . 30 ".• " " 'Ono. ." .'".;" 21 "" " .10 "" Thrie4-. "" • lO " " -.4 " One:49-horre nOwer Stem Engine with-Pump Gearing .p,nd 7 foot Waling Dlpth. The:hafts ate all wrought Iron. -One:lT-home power Engine with Fine Boiler and all connections-1n good order. • ..One 10 hor.te rortnble Engine in tlrst rate order:" ll3teain Boilers of itte following dimensions: 2 second-hand Boilers. 49 inch diameter. 22 feet.long 30 24 • " - ' 1.1 ." 24 " " "• ny 6 941 •.3.0 " .20 " • 3-4' ." " 20 -". 9 lienia . a. yard. 750 Yards . NOUN. 10 Gents a Yard.. 900 Y'ds Muslin ATI2 CTS A YARD. 2 • . •30 .t. • :al." • 4 i , •- : One seemid:hand Fine Boiler, .30 inch . diameter, 12, foot long wehlwo 10 tech flues. • Two water Boiler&COT:whedlpi ell cempTete. ': Twenty-eta latee . lDrift,Cars,-41 inch g• Inge. :.Two Dump - cars.• • ' .• '. • -Four set+ of Breaker-Rolls, different hiZell.- • .'Five Hoisting' Drama from 2.11,10 feet diameter, several 116arY Pump Wheelsand . '• • .•.. A lorof olnch.eeipien Pipe: . - - lot of 3 inch If him Pipe. • One 14 inch Pole Pam') Complete, .with 90 yards of Column Pipe:. . . • • •. • • ' . 'A one ton Platform Scale. ' .• One Lever Punch for semen or boiler work,. A lot of Schatellatea, Slides .and flu-t screens . : Several - large wrought Iron Shand; aliin ;Montle tons of new TRA, 22 Me., to theyatal. : At the • . • • . ' 3.lll.chinery .Depot, on Coal htrcet, • .11 IT.E Z . SPA 11K S • 'at • . .1000 YTS RIP:SLIN at .13 Cu. a Turd. , . . . 20,000 Yids Muslin • .. • Comptirdni all the finest and best' standard grades; from 16, to 21 tents.- 44: 5-4, 6 4 pude wide. 150 TVs !lints at to ct'or a Yard?' 1500•Y'da.PRENTS lAt 2,1 CT'S A YARD. RRi.DE,vtf;ABLE CO.ILEEiTATE Y. , FOR . • • The Exa entore of James Dunilas,' Deceased, and the Executors of . Witham - Richardson, 'deceased; will sell all that:valuable tract of coal land - knoWn as the *'Catherine Groli".Tritet. • • • dtlnate •in Cass' and Foster. Townshire,. - .Sehnylkill :County, fleilusylvania, ' • • • Ills tract contains 4:?.4 acres, almost all which are underlaid with' proven sentris of coal. The tract has , three distinct basins on tvitiz i—,The Pi ri•it rir Southern Basin: betweeirthe Mine Dill and Peeked litottntain the Middle or. Great Bastn,lbetween'the Peaked Moun tain and Broad-Mountain. and the Inverted ordugular Basin on the Proad .Mountain;:. The , course of. the veins avdrnge about 1700 yards.. ' ' " The - Middle Basin. - contains • ALL the known veins from the - ''Rig Orchard" down; .to-the first- in series of the theasure,:inclarlinz-tbe MANIVOTII- , tiellig ten veins in all, of the aggrigate tbtcknese of ovemieventy. feet.'. • There rire now two first cliss collieries cill.thit.traci, 'ids.: The "Glen Carbon"—under lease. which expires. ' October, .1671—and. "The' Peaked ld•untain..—the lease of which expired let of January, ISti7, and which is-now - . untenanted. There is ample. capacity . foe a third *Alien . In:the First or Southern Basin, whose eritions fey years would he. above water 'level.. The improvements, which wißbe sold with 'the lease, con- - sist of one nevi, . bwge, powerful -Cornish , Pumpidg Engine.' Mb . horse , power; • built, by ' Mr. Vasttne of Pottdvtlle With all its appurtenances; in complete ord, er, four fifty horse-power and one sikty-horse - power Hoisting and Parnping - Engines. 52 Miners' , Hollf , eBi one. lame Stone StOre andiNvellins - Raise. 'Reservoir, Water Plpes,.Stables,-and vatiousother valuable prop- - Besides this estate in fee, 't be • tindersignedWiDisell .along with it tbenght larisess•sed by this mate to mine 'coal above water leel on • the adjacent lands of the Forest Improvement Com - pany. between Certain points. For furt her' Informuition, parties, amtemplattng . a .purchase, and invited to.eall at the °dice of the :tinder signed; wherathekMay exaMine the. inventory, maps, surveys and Engineers report of this tract. The.terms of we will be made very liberal. • • , • ' :RICHARD SMETHURST,. • . • .. J. DUNDAS LIP/Tit:OTT, Butt tore of JaMee Dundas, .Deceased, 4001'rune , • • GEORGE J. RICHARDSON • • . . • •". • : .:THOMAS WEBSTER, • . . • • . THOMAS I . :TARNS, ' ' RICHARD SMETIIIIILST. Erect tore and . Trustees of Wm. Richardson, Deceased, No. 250 South Ath - street, .Phllinlelphia • or to IDUARLESI rRi, HILL, • • Rug Estate: Agent, Pottsville. ': Splendid Goods, Fast Caen. • 2 Cases PRINTS IS MS. A YARD. 1 Case PRINTS 17 Cis. a Yard. 1 Cue .Merrimacks d Cis. a Yard 1 CASE 9ertnan Prints, Jtingary 19;ISR Coal Hoisting Machine . . . Einow. five years since the ,intention' of our Coil 'Hoisting machine ; ' and never befre, with any Madill* have-We been : favored - with such • fiattering success. ' thete ' bean i. ZOO of them in use. . lt is simple, durable, and easy o operation, -and berme the large number. sold and the .perfect satisfaction given- We wa le tbeui with wbeebs of 4X, amid 8 feet diameter. scriptive circulars sent free on application: _ ' P. K. DEDERICK. AtriCUitMle 113113. Machine Wcirks, Ansel, LY: . . . . . pAOSAGE TO .4.N,D. FEMME • By Btflattuthllk- and swing packet at Redatedliatea. . . , . . Continue to twos Pawige Tickets, anflablefdr Twelve Months, hornLONDON, uvintroca“.r.etußst Todd. Ana. DRAFTS.. nalahle ,demalg: f0r.14 1 7 amount and onwards. ALEXANDER 13. Ma,rmeir, 4T-047COPC'eltd the Union Hail ,' Pottsville . Match 2, CARPETS, OIL 4:1141T.815* p- mov ( ic , ironld cal) . the attention of • •.0 ...ELMORE:VMS AND hISRCHANTS nirafthdtztteeeed stock of 33infeelc, Three, -Ply', in- RPE TINGS: 00,5„.ILloond01.,oniaottoi,hiy,whidmiw,mou; Sheir.Dradletins.vviiturt'vel,maettatt. Iciew,-PaiehtAlkUan,S—loehe • weit-at. centh g eird. . • MUM) 11613911,411 - ..,. . et:: doori above Ncklp t :iyiKqdpf, ":11dECIttAr—rt4lair-l'"' •• "na"°P3B.^:"' DEDERICK'S Patented April-Id, 1862., GRELTBIkITIEULI'D /Welc OTT:. litiO.Tlll3lo. ac.co4 86 :.?,4311TH . sTapirr. and '213 BROMMAY, MISCELLANEOUS. ONLY DIRECT LINE 'TO .FAL41144 CE. The General TrausitbuittdCorniiny'a Spieralid Mail ST.'LAr EN'T...Boossou •• • • Saturday. Oct. 5 :PEREIRE..DrouteNz - -Saturday; Ow .19 VILLA DE PARIS, s4icirrr - Saturday, Nor 2 EUROPE, UNARM.. • . Saturday. Nov id To Brest or Zayre. 'Ovine • Included;) FBA Cabin, Second Cabin. *Ss, On . • 1•• ' • TheseStratners douotoarry Steerage Passenrers.. , -- • GEO. meicENzte,,Agent..s9 BroAdway.' . `I3EYOND - .. THE : IAtt[SSIggIPPI .. A. Complete History of the Sinter ntitl: Teirri teriet, teens the Great Kit , - , re', the Great Occult:, . . . . .. 1. ' ... BY. - ALBERT • ti. RICHaRbSON.; i• '. -. . ,• ... , Its popularity is attted by the sale - of over 20,000 - •• lATIes in. a Single month. , "Tlle snd. Adventure - on .Pralrice, 11.1onntains and .the Pacific Coast, with ov,r • 2.oo.'Descriptire and Pho..: tow aphic View's of the Scenery, .Cities, Lands, 'lllhieg, People and - Curioeit;tei of the New States and • Terra°. .To proryective emigrants and Petile=t3 the Tar West,”.the Bisthry of that va-t and. fertile region will prol:ean invaluable assistance, - Suppl)itg UA want long felt of . a full, authentic and . rellah:e guide tsicliniste,'soll,.products, means of [rat's); *.tc. . • • ADENTS WANTED —Send.. for . ' Circulars' and see onrtertna; and a full_ del=criptina of the ••work. ' Ad dreits NATIONAL PUBLLSRLNG .CO:, 20 S. &Venal . . .. . A ire* More Aktiova 'lrina . led 'to take 'order /11.• for ourporoalar .looks aryl Eugraviciga, 'ciao r-on . Commits` on.or salary. ...Our publicationS'are standard .work.Sby the best and:iota in tho . p:tontry, among which . . .Tifranra Si&ed Bligraphy and History; . •; . • 11olland'a Life of. Lincoln: . . • • . : Abbot's Blistery of .the War, , • . Basal ay's. Li fa. of - Washington, ' • . . . • Re.T,S.- Philips! Chrialan Rules, ' .and others.• .. not he required to caova e a territory preciously • orptipled. unless preferred... '• For particulars addie...!?..OTIRDON, BILL & CO.; Publish env Springfield, MS.6B: • •" • - • A :LIST OF: NEWSPAPERS-, • We have • .pqbliabeil wsPa- - pets In the New Eiiel4nd Statee'; price ' Stitte of New York ;..price.2s. 'anFl District - of COlumbia price 9i.c: Penilaylvdnie; price 46c. Ohio; . price 215 c. • All of the- abovq,f6r Gab Dollar. U:1". EuWhildt. & CO., 40 Park Nqw, . . MADAM FOY'S Corset skirt Supperier Combines. in 'one' garmerit a Pn VCCT FITTIMI.OOIIBrT, and midst di.. iirable Sion Supporter ever offered the pablie. It 'daces the Weight of the starts' upon shoulders irn .stead Of the hips; it improves the form .without • itritt lacing; r gives, eatt,e. arid . el egan IS• approved and recommended by physlciarts:fdati nfacinied by SAUN . . • 96 Sim . . T he'Celebrn It;d. ' Esrigir COTTAVE ORCiANS d, ES,T.ET & CO.; Brattlehbro.' Vt . • The Orizinal Inventors and Manufacturers. . COmbiuing muie perfections than any other- in the . . . . . . .. . Ilaye taken theist Drem ams nt all the . ikrinapalTutra • . • • An the country. r - -, ..r •. 395 Wathlngton.st., Doeton.; 41T Broome' . st., IC.'-Y.:' IR No. - Rh - sr., philadelpbta;lls , llaii4olph at ,Chica'ai): A CENTS WA NT ED,;-To- INsi•c,AosAcr.. &c,—We Wish to Secure an agent. in emery . City of .nl:flee • than - 5,000 c. popalatton, to net for us in canvas:dug for badness': A man who is already estab lished in some. occupation Whie:ll allows nitn-a feyi spare.hours, em easiyiucrease his income several hundred dollars per year.: 'This is an opportunity for act lyemien to secure a profitable -noonee:don best established Advertislar. Agency 10 the 'United States. -AddressWillrfull partienlais. references, &c., ORO: P. ROWELL & Row; N. Y; • ••• • WE- ARECOMING - ' • . And wlll • • present to any :person • sending na u end) in onr Great One Price Sale of Dry and PanCy Goods, • a Silk Dress Pattern, ?lice of Sheeting, Watch; &c.; free of cost.- Cataloeneof koods and .sample, sent to any address free. :Address J. A W CO., .30 Dandver Boston. Mass.. P.. 0; Box t;126. • ONE 'DOLLAR.: ONE . DOLLAIi 1 A gent, wanted everywhere for bur Onenollar.sale: 'A Watch...a Tea, Sett, 'a Shawl, a:Dress *for one dollar each. ...'Setid 25 cts. and statnß:fortwo checks and' clrcillari4. eiving null .parlienlara • • A.l.lrCss -AR LINGTON, BROWNI:I'& . k.:O., 578 Washington street, . . . . , . , A gents. _Wanted...t 0 to $.20 ,aitlay, to introditee 11 our ne* ontent STAN SITITTTLE SEWING MA CHINE. Price $20.. it uses two thread?, and makes' the genuine.Leck - Stitch.. • _ell 'other low priced ma chines make . the chafe' Stitch. • - Exclusive terrirory given, Send for circulars_ W. G. WILSON ,k, CO., Manafacturera, Cleveland. Ohio. . . . .. . : . 'ffe Still". - Liv" . 6 l' D'al't be-humbugged by •. Impostors:or "patent." cut iron or.reachine ' —Stencil' touls. , . Send tor our New Catalogue 'of IMPROVED STENCIL. DIES. 20 varieties all of SleeVrarefnlly. finished and tempered. . •.• .•.• ~. S. M.- SPENCER & CO.; Brat tleboro,..Vit. '•. . . SlO . l DA . Y:Ir(A 7 4IiE BY, ANY ONE. With my Patent &end' Tools. liirepay a:niples. free . : _Beware of infringers. My eirrnkra Att.' dte.4 - '44: J PULLMAN, , .. , .. . . • o. iiald $75 tgi),Tif:rnrtms Qtunthsca.1 I tici) : urarvil'iiittuet . xtsn•:rfa'stin,, Wnitq:Wird ,cdottica.ldw,. - !,:d.rto ago and .addreea AMEttICAN WIRE . CO., 102. Broadway, N. Y. ~' . YOU'RE WANVEI)!. . . . ~ . . Ageritsj.both male and fcmaie, wattled * everywhere to sell the P %TIENT IVI`S..i /I , hili" ra.4EPVOIIC, (by which frrim one to two riagee,can be writtcn* without replen 'lilting with Inlc) r and cur * Faheyand-Dry 0,•,0d5, etc.— Can clear from $.3 to $lO a day. • No capital reitielred..,:. Price 10 &tits. 'Mikan adrerti.emement deecribinsran article for sale in our Dan nr Pu,rcliaming A jr,r,eu ey. - CPLCUldina . dEin . race.. -.• , . , ..• • ' ... . . . 6000: ArIENTS *fulled; :to sell rSlx• New Toren- (ions, of, great valor to' faiolliee ; rtlr . pay. gieat pro flOr. Soni Vie.. nod get SO 02 e:. autr Kunplti ratio. Auenta have.rcOule's;,oo;(oo: Eplirithis. Brown, Ft) ft E S . ,trill CRAFTONTM !NMI At PAINT. ,COMPANY are now manufacturing: the - .. Beat, Tf. lieaP* est.and moat durable, paint in life; two cote Welt int on, mixed with pure thisetgl Oil: 'will last 10 or 15. years ; It la of:a light . -brown or b_auiifulchocolate color, and can he changed to . ..green:load; stone, pilve., or: drab, •to :ault the ta , de of the. coieumer. It is valuable for Ilow.es, Barp6, Fences. - Agricultural Implements,;.-Carriage.-and • Car, makers, Wooden ware, Canvas, Metal and Shingle Roof', (It being fire, and Water proof),•Bridgee, Racial Casee,• Canal Boats, Ships and,Sisipte. Rottoiria.l7lcior Oil Clotha.(ene,inan afactorer.baying Used. 5000 hide. the v l st as a retint forany. purpose is anscrpassed for hddy:dorar . Claaticity, and-adhealveneas. Price iit3 ;TA lib!. of SOU lbs., which 'will •-anpply alarmer tor yeau4;to , Warranted CASI,9 11-1 above:. Send for a • circular. which gPres• fullpartfenlara. • None genuine nrdeesbrawled.ln a trade mark Grafton Mineral Paint. Addretia .I.lt Witt C.' TllO.ll de CO., • OONSILTIVIPTION CURED:- , , . .BjE T Trite Reined,' ni - Taro itiscovered...." • tipilAill'S PEESIINE.VI`. (313aPt. prepared:froin the formula of Prof: TrousSean of Paris, cures COnsump thin, Long Diseases:Dmitchitio. Dyspep'L i. Marasmus, General:Debility and all mot bid conditions of the aye tem dependent. on •deficiencY of viva' force. • Dia pleasant to taste: and a single bottle will convince the most Bkepticil a its vitt ne as the great healing. rrme &yet the age,.. $1 atottle 'or'rtx bottles for $5. Sant by Eipress. ,• Sold by S. C. .IIPIL:131;:•No. :25 • South Eighth st., Philadelphia, and'prlnripal-Druggiste.. Cir- *HIE *RICIIEfiT MAN In .itie .WOlitL D. . . • • Extract of a.Ectier treat Baron Solcontan Psnis, • Stb 26 RueFanhy, St.• . yen he' kind enoneh to . have forwarded to me hire 200 bottles of your India Liniment : if you 'will send at the same lime the account, I williorward you the amount throngh Messrs. Belmont .1-- co:, N. T. . Baron Solomon.Rothwhild having recommended tri• many of his friends Major LANE'S LINIMENT.*nnd they-being desirous to procure it,' huahould advise hirn .to establish a depot in. Paris, • • • THE'INDIAN LINN:ONT, As - a 'relief,. every 'ready; asatdlter of. pain,• tsken inwardly,- or ontwardly'applied; has en equal., For the relief. and cure of Rhennancic. , aed 'neuralgic. ,Affeetions ' Sprains,. Bruises, de. ..Szo., It is Unequalled .. • . It Is also . . most eflicackins taken in wardly, in the'cure:,Of Cr.ampS, and Pain-its ihe'Sfornacia, Diarrhiela, °poen 'tery, Cholera illOirbus, Cholera lafantinn,• Oke.., - and is. withrailexcept inn 'the 'Meat wonder fp' ..Panneen the. world affords: - No'• FAMILY Should be*Photit . Every--Traveler by land or.sea should have a bottle.. Minors and Farmers reidding at a distance from Phyrlclaes- ehould keep It constantly on hand.: In case of Accident.' 'and sudden attacks of Stomach-Complaints, -its-value cannot :be 'estimated:— Msjor LANE'S INDIAN LINIMENT," and take no 'Aber Pricer° cts„ per bottle: • For saleet. wholesale and retail by -Denise Barnes &Co,. 21 Felt- Ring. N. T:. ' Gale ea Rattans, IN' Greenwich st:, N. Y.: F. C. Weill &Co 102.P'ulton at: - N. Y.... Chas. N. Crittenden:SS tith Ave. . N: Y., and - by . restebtable Druggists througlesit Me world. None genuine unless sigued by Jona .Tu4S. Lase, and: countersigned' by J. T. LANS.& CO...Fropilators, 163 Broadway, N : Y. • ' :-112r - Sendlor'Circular.-: • • . • . . .1114LY-61:, -NrO6TtimATE-Ilvm4liY: . $ l . ONLY larlejection cures Gonorrhea , or. Meet' in TEN OATS, without noMous drugs. when all other remedies fail. De. liming lltuasmt, Station' F., N. Y, city. . Al Physiological View afil!aryillge. ':"-riati4217.urtiooK . svxft PV14.1*171). Containing Iteary three hundred . Pages .. . . •And 130 fine plates and., engraving's of the 'Anatomy ot. the Human - Orgabir .in a state of Health* and Tilifeage: with a _treatise , - on ...Early Errors, its De- . phimble Conscqueirea upon the ltind and Body, with' thelinthirr's Plan pfTreatment -the only rational and' 'sficressfurtitodo.:Of Care, Is 'shown by 'he report - Of troth treated. • A tnithhil adviser to the Married mei 'those contemplating marriage. who . entertair. doubts of-their,pbysical Sent • free of postage to any•addrew osr receipt of 25 cents in stamps or postal. currency.. by addressing DR LA CROIX, No 31 Maid. en Lane,./.lbany; N. Y. The antlibr may be consulted' upon - any 'of the diseues.uplinwhleh. Wid book treats, eltberiperaonally of by. mail. Medietnes seat to any, . Mahood aud the • mrigor.of youth. irestored in 4 ,weekor r access • astorrisitced. = DR...ssoceres_ & pence of. Idle • restoree manly .wee.. from, whatever rause arteleg. the effects of wady.. pettidclotts, WWI& self abuse: impotency and climate eye ova; iifice to this 'wondenT. rnedlclne,' If takCn regularly according . to the: &mations {which are very Simple. and To:lntro no restratntTrotribosineti oe pleasura):: qat tare is impossible: Fold In bottles: at $ll, 0r,4 quantities tn. , ne for To be of- the sine apOointedi.gt tat in America, BERMAN ()RUTZ-. -RN: Sffl Bowery...lmA gces 94 Ate., N. 40-41. . eT ILIT , 3E3 IlE*.Ael. . . . . AVollectkig SA,t_tIiB,MBSW letCheir% by L. 0. R -B=thiif.of ;adalt, Golden Thh Bestlideklar - Choira. • ". . The Best Book' for 'Schools.' . • ; - • The Best Boorfcrrlocletles. -- • The.Beat,Booh for Couveatiotuv : . . The Beotellook for Practice.- • The Beet Book for Social Blegtoi. , • I.The Best , Book for Families. • • ' ' • The Best Book for all Singers.,' . • Pitted to all Bettoellnations—all Occaslann—all Ca , in lta 8ing1018010)1 Its Glees, Part-Bonga. Jct. Anihearus'aid Sentences. • NEW YORIC. .rn its Varletilif Hymn • • :• • • • Price SI SS. &pia poet-paid. OLI ; VIIRDTPSON & C0.,-Publhdiem &Or= — CH DITSON & CQ., :New Tadao, : &AMT . :MAN 011:: KENDAL L: . 80;0,0070,01118 1 :80LD • 'MY- POLICY:" • . Oh ! Andy John, my Jo"J"ohn, • • • •...11e'6nsy, while:you - may.' • ,-• • , For gun will bn,impesehed ; john, .• ..Artin'te. an early dsy : . : • Tour race i± al:dost run,*JOhn. • .•. Few pardons more you'll sign,. • Your ndma will be 4 hy:evoni, John; .• • • Through all theretit of. time. • , . . . . Oh !. Andy Sohn, my Jo John. • . • . . • ;Yon mighthsveleft aname: ' 'That-von mats ht mod of, -And •sto'ud np in _fame. But it Is n% V* . litobee, 'John," • . r The povle y Wye bebnyed. ' . • :In st ite of B - • : yun In the shade. - ' • , . . Oh t. John, my Jo John; • 'rray triLlt has ,Proton done ; . ". That-you sti.rtid persecute him.. John t . There is itoue, beneath the *cut - MOrelaithfhl to his. country, John, -Or labored for the:right— •.. T.iltnt Ups grest rebellion dOwn. • • Elie workt4 both daq and night.' Oh ! : Andy Johti;iny.aJohn," 'Sheridan:to - • For.tu ruin ; *ll tlio4 • rebels out, • • •And . earrilor.'s bright name The peCp'e - will - kopport.him. John, -While you before the world Wrll . Ftanddiscraced foreter. John; Their ibilliagaMat you hurled. Oh ! Andy John; my Jo'John, The people Kari! way . . Of iloingnri thin business, Tohn— •llear %that they, hire to 191 y. . ' The fhrtieth Congrenatc4, — r!killicet, • We'll trust it in their • Be redly for Salt River, John, ....., And atart.frrioreign Ohl Andy Jolin,.niv: Jo John, . ' The•time.t.9 rran'ing nigh': Wr mnstier del , our accounts, John, • sityjt with a sigh. • • . • Thi , talent!. wn've.libused, John,. • • Or Intwo not twed . (or good.. Wilt. snrely'tell'A4uinst al, John, .. Before the' bar of God; . . - • 'Oh Andy:John., myJo John, • , : Then *hymn throw r‘ide • • . . Such mean mitlignant act' John,- . . • AmbitiOn.'ponip, and pride? • Act protnntly (or the people, john, • their in view. • The world you' know; 051 Andy, John, not,mlide jn.t.'for you. Wtnntnaton, Sept. I, ISO:. • • : - MINING, ART AND. SCIENCE. • ALPINE CLIMBING. • Nspnleon the First had no railway engP nPersto help his troops, either over or through 3lont Cen!s, into Italy. The present Empe rot, with the grander re.sourees of modern. vienee 'at his command, has promoted the gre•ir iiinnel .mountain, from the first year of hia rehm—as far back as the days of the Chevalier Maus, who was to have ored air( ugh tit the rate eLa mile and a half, a year • - Nowhere else was a railway ever at tempterl, in the face of a greater single obsta- Cle. The mountain rises 67Q0 feet, or _say a mile arida quarter, above the sea', 2700 ft. -of thiS "eleyation being attained within leer miles of tither side.df the suminit: M. Sonimpilier -(by no means tysleepee `his-works) is bor ing atraight !hraugh omit line of rather more than 7:1 miles • The work - is: . carried on at. a . great expenditure:of time- and money.: and when.tinished lia - ve a gradient of I in for . h;Of iis length; and although there ig difference of level Of 439. ft between . its :'two ends, - the ventilation can hardly be all • that is desired,. especially as there . will : he . no. sh a tM, arid as there is a summit - at the . length of the tunnel, althdugli ft higher than the. Italian or -Bardonneehe end... Mr.. Brurilees and. Mr. Fell; in :the: mean time, hay° already opened ti line Over the mountain,- . 46 . miles. in dength,. and .of which no less than d 1 miles; are - in - covered way.. This dine is::of. but. 3 ft. 7 'inches .gAuge:. . While. Sonimeilier ...was ..hbring through; theY TestilvUcl to climb up; folleiw-: .the zigzag .diligence :road • already Insde, that widelfruns to and fro up'St.Bon Mee DOWP,_at the-baelc . of Ventitor. Much of the ascent is at the rate of 1 in 12, - , and the ends of the zigzags ' instead of being - connect ed by switches, arehent to two,chain curves. In one place, we be)ieve, 1700, feet rise is gained in this way, with ,a line of nearly.four miles, althongh the straight distance up the slope cf.the bill isliardly more than a mile. , But when it comes to climbing monetains, there are many ways, and we have. Mitch rea son for doubting whether Mr. Fell's is al tOgether the best. That it is mechanically practiefible there is, of cpurse . nd doubt ; in -deel this was king proved before Mr. Pell ; adopted it; for the well:known' centre-rail and gripping rollers is an old plan, first pa - - tented by Mr. Vienoles. and first'practically worked out, in . 1850, by. George Estql Sellers, of ,Cineinnati; 13% 5.,. who built Several loco- motives, with five cylinders and . gripping ho'ders, for the tnid_rail.• •Sorne.of these en gines vre personally and carefully examined in 1853, 'and others hi 185 G.: - It is to he'rememtm red that locomotives hating all wheels (eight-in number,) coupled together have worked by their own 'adhesion up inclines of in 1 in 10, drawing their tender and a:railway wagon behind thent. A. series of .temporary inclinei• of in 10,; connected by ziez , g,s, were thus worked, in the winter of 1552-53,. thr; line of the. Ohio and Bal timore S during the construc tion of one of the tunnels of that line, in the' Al'eglieny mountains. This mode of work ,ing continued for several weeks, and'without accident_ :But our present purpose is it:icon- Side'r spedial modes of ?,:niking,railway ,eart , riagos up very'steep inclines; _First . nf all, there 'is rope 'traction. We . 'have colliery engines winding - 1000 tons of coal daily, or -say 2000 tons of total Weight, from a depth of .even 1700 • feet, the -same as Mr. Fella - inelpal .rise; ancl -the engines at the Dukinfield pit wind from "a .:depth of. 2000 feet- Here are more, than 4,000,00 foot tons 'of. work dnne daily, and with compare,- rive safetY, although the ropes do break some.,:' times, .as was the case, indeed._ the other'day.,' ,at Dukinfield, Ike deepest pit in the whole , world.- Gaing from coal;pits to rairwityi.-Mr: Brnnlees himself, the engmeer. to - the %Mord Cenis Railway, has a connected series of pas sengerrall way inclines at •work up the-Serra do Cubatao, in Brazif, nearly five niilesin'to tal length, and rising 2550 feet,. the average inclination being 1 in The objections to the rope . are its liability to wear and, crystalli sation, and 'the fatal'. consequences of its breakage: The steeper the incline, however, an d: supposing the same given strain cm the rope in all casts,- thele+3B. the. mechanical_ _wear ; indeed, .ropes wii3ding vertically, -on large drums, wear very slowly; although,they fail nevertheless after a certain time.-'and it is always, iierhaps, with, some little mis that the engineer.trufitit paaapger traina,to a rope at all. . There is another mode of using the rope, that proposed and. patented by. - Mr.,Divict Greig, of the Steani Plough Works. Leeds.— it is to have a fixed rope, and to climb up it by means of a traveling 'engine with . a clip drum. : Mr. Oreig. indeed, hit off this Inge-. nious application of the* invention of his for... mer partner, the late Mr. JOhn Fowler, while himself erossit . ig Mt: Cents." But it is an object, it:Casing - a rope, to get rid of the traveling engine altogether, with- its weght and reSistance _front gravity. Attu Fell's 17 ton engines throw away 28.900. :fent-tons .of work:in overcoming their, own gravity on the 1 . 700 feet rise towhich . we have referred,- and of their whole weight, 2 4 . tons is special gear . for working on the mid . rail, and which is 'literally dead weight on all other portions of .the line.• :It is not improbable, hOwever, that Mr: Greio expedient was intended as a substitute fit the mid' rail. .In this case: we fear it could not ;well be worked 'around. the curves, as unless the rope were divided IMO separate lengths for the straight portions on ly, it would require special and probably complicated and nnsatisfactory : arrangemerits for working it around .2 chain curves. In. this case, too, the: engines .would work, not only by their bite upon the rope,. brit by the acihWon also of their -driving wheels: upon , the outer or ordinary rails. And here a fresh difficulty ,would- arise, fir the rope would stretch to a certain extent, when the clip dnimtrat grasped it, and by its own .inherent elasticity the rope -would• alternately extend and contract, to, a certain extent, ,while" the engine -was - working Up its lerigthi- a result due to the combined effects of varying strains and to, a. considerable . cornpensation always 'going Onitt the 'rope itself. But as the .rails would .neither .stretch nor, contraei, anti& the driving. wheels ought never to slip (and if tbey'did; and the' Clip drum was worked from 'the'sarne thotion, that. Would slip,- too),' it is clear that a strife would often'. be going. on between therail'atulthe rope,- sometinitis one and somefitites 'the other doing .the whole work.. The rope, too, would be found to ;crystallise, or at- least, to undergo the molec ular. change• commenly . clestignated . by that term with nearly the same readiness 'as If "worked. over *hiding drums. Another mode of "climbing steep gradients. IS that of making the . whole weight of the ..train available for adhesion, instead of relying Only.on that:of - the locOmotive. M Flacbat propasedle 18 . 59; to Work over the Al pis:with 'rolling.'stocic,. of which , each carriage had 'steam cylinders and driving gear, the steam. being taken -.through' jointed pipes' , from a 'single large boiler, mounted - upon ' carriage also tilted with cYlinders and. driving gear, of a strength th..,wor . k up its own adhesion...An other platiii-to make each .carriage a . OM-; plete locomotive; supporting it_ npon'two. - steam 'worked . bogies, which would readily :work around-Short ettrVe.a . (2 chains radius on' ,the feet 7i inch' gauge) even, if Planed, it it. ',Coriaidertible dietanc.e . Apart... The.. *lee_ 'rnightihave.either (Our or six,. wbeels;eaul 7 4; according to the - distributictw of weight.let ,, .- ,rjuired,' the present 17.t0n-engines at 'Mont Cents resting upen..four ittlitiels 'only. - ^They ethjentions to M. Flaelnit'splati.are the great_ er Complicatian is compered with' Ordinaryl eagine.s, and the kiss for. the purposes ,driught of the steamworked in the carriages... 'as well as the eertainty Of a considerable loss in - winter hy condensation in a long series of Jointed pipes; And prehably_ti . constant con 1 ablefable lose by leakite.. 'The objections t),i the other:Plan are fewer, and, libleita it bean: !ebjection,on-thepart of paseengera, : ta'rlde is 'encb_near neighborhood . of • the :boiler,' this Single •Copies Six Cents. . . would probibly he found the ireiy . tiest .sys- . tem of working inclines of froni 1 m 10 to 1 in 20, the limit Of inclination tto: which such a steam-carriage could ivork . on a good dry rail being perhaps 1 in 5. _Passengers make no objection to thtir proximity-to the boiV on board steamboats, and therWould doubt , leis s . OO - n reconcile themselves to the locomo tiyo boiler, separated from them! by the wa ter-tank arid coal bunker and by a luggage corOpyrtment. But one boiler would be re- quire& for working both bogieei of: the ear - ringe.l In favortible • weatin f • such carriage could draw-ari'mliniiry rallwarearriage, or prkAsibly two: behind it, and, ihait tip a gratii ent of even 1 in In or 1 111.12. • Oilier plans for creep climbing are those for increasing theadhesion of - the wheels of Ordinary locomotives. One is that - of one or more V-grooves' in either the:tyke or the rail.. This plan would no clonht secure:a powerful ;" indeed. .111. r Robertson,lof. Glasgow, has bis V-groove frictionalgearing in use for drivieg rolling mills. ' Dr, rot railways the plan is open to many obji q ions. First: it requires the, maintenance of: an absolute uniformity of gatige, to a'nieetysinattairtable we tear. upon: a railway. .One inventor, Ike. are aware, proposes to'allow one tire bleach pair of driving or coupled wheels tit slide la terally on the wheel, so as to adjust itself to any slight inequality in thc gauge ; but this sliding of a tyre, fitting its wheel with even tolerable closeness, and having its full load of feur or five tons upon it, wonldbe clemly e‘peclally as the force trom which • sliding . is expected would be aPpliecl at but 'one point in the circumference. We are saying nothing of the safety or intherwise" of tyres fitting so loosely ss to -4driiit of even the idea of, lateral sliding: 'A fart ons objection is that of grinding . of V's 'and V-grodres.due to the difference of .diameters - and that in somecases' one wbeel of a pair would - be found bearing on the larger and the other, on the smaller, diameter of the groove, making one wheel, in effect, 2,'3, or more inches larger than the other, and prob ably 'ining the engine off the Igrooves. and off the line. • • The grooves iflmade In the rails, would fill np, and also priobably cause the rails to split. If the tyres were grooved; they would inevitably, split.; - :The whole scheme, indeed, although fr‘quently. pro 'posed, is one which cannot beer considera tion. Another mode"of increasing the cohe sion of the driving.wheels is. that proposed 'by Mr. Page, who has worked 'a loaded mid el locomotive up an Incline of I, in 21, )n ohr presence. While he .would reverse Ordinary. railis for the carriages ho proposes to.run the engine up. broad tramways of timber, : the surface of the driving wheels 'being some what rmighened to secure a better : bite. It .is clear, however, that the tiri?ber would be rapidly destroyed, m the joints, ing especial trouble, and iris not certain that the full ad. hesion could be depended upon with snow and ice on thewood. • - ,It has been proposed to ruM the eArriages on ordinary rails, and to draw them by trac tion engines working on the ballast between or outside the rails. As the tpeeds on The Mont Cenis Railway are slow, not more than ten miles an hour on the steep inclines„•this plan would be feasible, no douhr, although it would, involve changes of ;engines -on a journey, as traction engines ',would lie too .slow and wasteful upon the •tlitter-portions of the lice. • The'plan,of magnetising tlie-tyres of the driving wheels has been tried with but - iudif . ferent suceem• 1 • Finally, there is another rmale•orclimbing in favour of •;which much may be said, a mode which answers best on the very steep est inclines, or rather on vertical in. This is by the, pneumatic 4oist. Ima .10 feet tube with a presure of but 1 lb. per square inch, we have a: propelling fordo of 11,310 lbs.,- which would carry a gross load of 20 tons up an incline of lin supposing the moult- 7 ,tain. to be as steep. . TO . drive :this Joad at -ten miles an lieurwould minim 800 horse power, irrespective of. loqses by friction of engines, leakage of air,. am, -hut the .effort would he but for a_few 418; at'this rate 6800 - feet of tube :rising•li'oo feet would be traversed iu less than eight minutes. . A blowing-engine having a 13- feet ainpiston, and a 40 inch steam-piston, working with :in lb: of steani, would follow.up ;It ttain at, ten -Miles an hour or •Bso - feet per minute, - the blowing piston moving at about 400- feet per minute. And only a blowing: engine would answer, a fan upon Mr. Rammell's plan be ing wholly out of the question for such a pressure. It might-be preferred •to store, the compressed air in tin 'air-holder, rising and falling in a tank like •a pas-holder, and to, send up a tra'n from"this. A lit feet tribe, 6800 feet long. would, require. 5:31;072 cubic . - feet of blast, equal to the capacity of air holder .120 feet in 'diameter. and 17 feet .° inches deep, the'. holder :weighing 725 tons, to balance the pressure withimit. It; would be only by the use of an air-bolder at the foot ;of each. Wine that the system' would be rem.. dered entirely . independent Of accidents to the blowing engin( s, the only,. danger then remaining being that of the explosion of the air-pi ldt r, which if I 20:feet in diameter, and 'made of }'inch iron, Would 'have diame , rical strain of 1400 lb. only' per square C inch the solid plates, 'or; say, 1 ton per square.inch 'of net section betwien rivet hOles. The Up pet portion:would be made .hemispherical.— Even if made - of i . inch iron throughout, the holder would require about 450 tons of addi tional weighting; or to'weigh ;2.1 tons in all order.lo keep down agaiusi the•preFsme arid to force out the blast at 111 b. per square When - aArain.of tbe.regulation weight, for the weight would require V): be regulated nicely, 'was run up to the mouth of the tube, a suitable piston with ,a -amount of windage would be .affixed to each, end car riage, and the doors of the tnTlC . Would • then be shut. .Except for the train lie,hu , the pas , ,sengers Would be Initlarkness but:l he wind ge,:of the Pistons would secure' plenty of - 'ventilation,_ and no doubt the 'escape of blast Past the•piatons, even at 1 pressure per square inch; would make a good deal of noise When the train reached-the abort - level at the summit, a comnffinication would be opened between the ascending and descending tubes, giving kmeanpressure of ne4rly. 4 per' lb. per inch in both,,' Thus preventing overrun ning ; the .commtinication would - then be. closed i ..and the carriages.would then be let dowaby.their.dwia gravity, checked at first by tbiir brakes. and immediately efierwards by the compressed .air, Whichlwhen the train had moved through about -1.30 th the length of the tube, or 23,0 feet - in - a tube nf t;SOO feet lebgth, would have ti.prebaure . of I pound on the.lower side of thittrain; This compressed air would-then be let into tlie air-holder at the foot Of. the Aube, -and at a rate • ‘rhich would exactly regnlate.the speed, of the de , Seending trale. Theamount ;of air pumping thus required would-never be considerable after the drat train • bad . gone over. The -skillful 'engineer" will perceiVe for himself ,nitich of the 'detail recittired . for working but Snell aylan, and, just,as,safety gear is provi ded In many - mine cages, he, will see the.ap plictibility of much the same_contrivances in the tubes to act in case of the - failure of "the air -holders, or'in any. other . improbable emergency. , The objection to the whole sys tem is the first cOst, of the tubes,: air- holders, - and blowink engines;' _ but_ Considering that the length 'of the . thbcs would be • but one 'third that of a rail Way OVercoming . the same elevatioo by of 1 in 12; and but one- Seventh that of a railway line inclined at the rate of 1 in 28; and that in the, prement Mont Cenis line aine miles min - covered way, it, is not certain that the Cost trould he much greater, *Halt Is certain that. the -working expenses, as welt as the time of transit, Could be much less. _ • The. mid rail system is ayoWidly a tempo • rary expedient for working; an exceptional line, which, will be superseded in a few years by the . gxtat tunnel. and we believe its sue cess must be,astemporary as its expediency. It *rill be found, no doubt, that the adhesiol is•sufilcient; in most cases, without working the gripping wheels at all; the' engine taking up a load equal at least to itts own weight.— When. hewever, the_gripnirig wheels are used, it will be found that the eight tyres are of unequal diameter, the ordinary driving wheel tyres always wearing much faster .than those of tlit . gripptng wheels% The lost nao ilon,, hie,'in all the'wonderfil gear we Inds trated page,264 of our 141 volume, and the innumerable and al rhost"in acetsi3ible partEl requiring Oiling, lead.us to look with much dotibt upon the.whOle systern of the mid-rail, and gripping wheels. As; we have already Bahl, the line,: even . with its present gradients of 1 in :12. may, be,..and' probably will be, "worked without it.;, and it Will-be used, if at all, only as a . :`brake r 7for which, : everiwhere no:brake is wanteci;• the whole system appears adinhablymendesigned,-4rroter EN6DJEER: sgssElmz STEELWORKS. There are now upwarks of a dozen makers, Of Bessemer steel inAhekingdom, employ , ng very .nearly fifty converteis Of froml tems to 10-tcms each.' The largest works are at Bar row, where by.the way, there are to be great doings on the 191.11.b1it . : 'mil the occasion of opening tbe Barrow and Furness Railway There: are. at Barrow. tea • Converters, six of these of 7 lone each; and - four,of 5 tons.: The next largest , p'ant, is to-be ,found at Dowlais, xvbeie there are 6.converters of 5 - tons, and at ibe Atlas Works (Bir,4obit Drown & Co ), Bbeftleld ) , whereesthere are two 10 ton and C 1 r. /dews. Cammell and Cdr. triSf.Wsaldf howeVer; to. have a still' larger, plant,. althottitt not, at a single estab lishment; for they have four "P ton convert ets as Pemistone; and two 4-;tott converters at their CyclopeWilks,in Sheffield. The Lan (Whims Steel' Works.. at - Manchester, were laid out, for ' eight converters of 6 tons ; but we believe only two have been set to work Thew° next largeiteatabllshments are the ,Crewct steel works of the Pindon and Norih- Western -Railway,- at "Crewe.' and the works °film, nancliester, Ralltiray i :Phint CuMPany, Idattbitestet, - each - of 'whith has . four ton conierters.,,llextire the B4liort:Steel and leotrOoinpanri t Workil l 4,Bol4ollriurl'the 13ANNAN & RAIVISEY'S * STEAM PRINTING ,OFFIOE. • Baying J:suclired across Premiss. we are now prepared to smite JOB and .BOOK- PitINT:NB of areal de / scription at the office of Abe Mama' -.Folmar; cheaper , Lban it can be dike at any other estaLlishws‘mt in thei . county, each as - • = . Beek., Pamphlets, Bills of Lading', Large Posters, Railroad Ticket! 'laud Bill.. . Paper Beak., Articles el Agremialai, -Time. Bookl.l - Bill Heads, Order Books, At the wry shortest notice. 0112 stock of JOB -TYYJI • is more extensive than that of any other office in this - section of .the State, endive keep hands employed en prenly Eir Jobbing. Tieing practical Printers ours& eg we will gaarszitee one work to be as neat aa • and! bat „ '!=eul be turned out lithe cities. PRINTING U ODL. ORS 'done at the ahortestnotice BOOK BINDERY. Boob bound in orrery variety of style. Slant Boot 01 every description manufactured, bound and rulcd t order, at shortest notice. - • . Ebbw Vale Companles, at Ebbw Vele, with It pair. each -of 5 ton- converters. Messret Henry Bessemer and Co., of Sheffield, have a pair of converters, but Ive eannot at this moment, say of what size. Messrs. Same, I Fos 'and Co,, of Deepc.ir, near Sheffield, have a paled S ton converters, and there is a pair of the same size at the. Old Park. Ironworks, Wednesbury. Mr John M. Rowan, of Gies gow, has a - single 3 ton converter Bessemer' plant was fitted up same time at Tow Lsw, in in Durham; but we believe it has never been Set to work, . . Besiles the above-named works, a new es tablishment, with a pair -of converters, and postiessing the most improved plant. will shortly. commence working at Dist Green-. wich.. These are the works of Messrs. Bes semer Brothers (the sons of Mr. - Henry Bes— semer), ,artd have been erected under .the constant superintendence of the last named gentleman himself —LosOos Esuisien. . • UNDEnGaoovn TESWERATG RE. —Professor Sir William Thomson at the Meeting of the British Association, at Dundee, - read a paper tot Di. JEttiUS Sl•hvarcz, "On the Internal heat of the E trth." It was stated that .:170-• underground stations` bad been examined; and duly four of them had shown a decrease of undergrofind temperature. In snore re marks' on the: paper, Sir William 'Nome= advocated. the Association undertaking bor jugs to ascertain the question of underground heat; as mines were uncertain data on which to proceed. He proposed borings of 200 ft. under soine Afrie.n desert, and under an old sea-bottom or lake. Sir Charles Lyell ex pressed the opinion that it would probably to - found when different portions of the earth had been examined that igneous seas-and lakes had been formed first ,in.one part and then - in another ; that.th - the parts bad . been successively -melted and 'cooled ; that It was this; and not,' an internal igneous core of the earth, which :explained- the ap- - _ pearanct; of cooling that . Was obvious in the rocks. Professor Phillips addressed the sec- Aim], pointlig' out the uncertainty of thi3 - knowledee oa underground temperature.— _ - I.,comox ENGIN lE. ERING . - LETTER FROM PHILADELPHIA. • . Sept.- 26th, 1867. . •Eprrons MINEItS! J012 . 1 . 4AL :—There occurs - in the last number of. your widely spread and interesting paper, art.-article • headed "Philadelphia. Illanufactures,".and the writer expressesastonishment that there should •- centre in this city such an immense maim facturingifiterest. The New York Tribune of ,May 1, 1857, urging more ,attention to • home produetion, says : "Philadelphia. has . at least. tWeoty manufactOries of textile fab, tics where New 'York has but- one; and her • superiority in the 'manufacture '• of , metals, though leas decided; is still undeniable."' :- Perhaps it may be .newa to many of 'your .readers that there are over 30,00 . 0 more hone**, here than in any other city in the Union, and-7 that during the last year more buildings were erected in this city than were erected in New . York and Brooklyn.combined. We have a street here 15 Miles in length; embed and lighted! The largest gas works M theworld ure located in Philadelphia, and the. city, embraces an area of 12.9 square miles, equal to one-ninth of the .entire State of Rhode Island. So you perceive that our in different location as a- seaport, is.connterbal anced by the enterprise and attention given to all sorts of heavy. and light manufactures. Pleaie accept the thanks of the city trade through !re, for the hint thrown ont to your merchants to come this way when their stecks need replenishing, and make their purchases from first hands, which-is always considered the most sensible. . . Very respectfully, • - .H. P. TAYLOR Wiimo ten men watch for chances one makes ehaucei ; and while ten waitforsome thing to turn up, one . ' turns something up•; so, while ten fail One succeeds and is called a man of luck or favo, he .of fortune._ There is no luck like pluck, and fortune most favors those who are most Ineitlerent to for tune. A LOT of laud in New Haven, Connecticut. which sold: thirty ,years'ago, for $l5O, and fifteenlears ago was appraised at $2,500„ was last week appraised at $40,000. 1k order to keep up with the progress of. the age,.Time has abandoned the scythe and hour-glass, and purchased a mowing:ma chine and a watch. • AcCOUNTS from nearly all Nrts of Russia concur in stating' that the year fin 7 will be noted as a year of plenty.- Tes•business, of the Postal Morley Depart ment is estimated at twenty-millions for the current year. , "I.7IIIIIIELLA9 Recovered Hera, la the cq:Mfocal announcement Of a Brooklyn atore_ke.eper. • HARTFORD . has twenty-three insurance cnmpauiea with an aggregate capitalof $33,- 000,000. THE receipts of the St. Lnnis Custom House -for August were $l4l •28G, 53. A EN'Sus,nf Dubuque givea.21,222 populs-- on, and $6,101.040 vqlu4tiop." Toe-experiment orralsing tea in Georgia promi,es to be successful-. ttioiu J, A. M. PANSITIOItit, *editor,. Tu-E.foilowing tedeht:rs and salaries of the Borough of Minergrille, has been spat us by . a friend. Term, 10 months : Mr_ ;T. NV:.Danenhower, Principal of High School.:. Mr. aW. Channel), Grammar School ". • , • N0..1.. 75 00 bliss E.. 1.. Beach, do. No. 2 . .. C. Siiyder, - SeCondary School, No., 'l,' Miss Lottie Trout, do No: 2 rate E. Ault,.do. " E .A. Sutton, Primary -School, - ' N0..1 ' , • - Misi bL P. Sinter, do. No. 2.. . ... _ " Jane Digr, do. No. 3 Myrit . 01easedj.o hear from, lc"Outh.". Porrs - vit.t.e, October 51h. IW. „ Mn. EDITOR : = l.ll looking over the Edw. , cational Column Jie ably edited by yoti,l, saw the - question, "Should School Directors.. receive. & Salary ?” , Also, that you required an answer to the same. It has not as Vet . been taken up; therefore, in Order to draw out theitews of others, and to express my own, I send you this communication.. The position of School Director is, or- shoold be, -/ a very high and !important one. Upon him : devolves the. duty of procuring a suitable teacher to instruct, and thereby improve the • • minds of those intrusted te• his charge, .end, who are destined to positions we Haar; fill. Thereare many other duties which they ' , are to - engage in ; duties . , demanding much., labor and lime ; and . all' of -which must be accomplished without any recompense'what-, ever. - But says one, „"is. not" the honor of. the position enough, without receiving a sal ary.for what ehould.be his pleasure ?" answer no. Who ever heard of honor filling , a man's cellar, unless there were a sufficiency , of 'money to ? - To, live,, 'we must -' have the means wherewith to do so. - Few of Os are so self sacrificing and patriotic as ; to toil for nothing. Give us an equivalents: - fin. the services we render, and we will tvork; . with a...hearty good will So it is with the -. School 'Director. Continue' to elect them- to',. your pesitions of honor, and they will fi11...T• them as most positions - of honor are tilled,— Very loosely. ' GiVe them something more' lasting than honor a and they will give mi better work... - Another argues,. that - onr, school tax must be increased to meet the de-, mend, and the people will not like thparit. • 'Very true. But, how mnch.more, in addition .to the tax a sit now stands, - will meetlt 1-- Very little; as the; salaries would not' be . large, and "there would be many to 'beer . it.;''' As to the unwillingneas of the people to, pay;, it, wewould ask, when did the people like to see their taxes increased for any atiaprelyer • meat on-the old system of education? Every innovation on the old system, forthe put- .- pcse of advancingthe cause of education, ._ has met with much opposition on the flart . pir:, tax-payers ;: and who shall say that those Improvements have not benefitted- their op popents ? The Holy Scriptures tell us, than: "the laborer is worthy' of hie hire " If thin: . be so, •iue not the honest; hard working , School Directors worthy of their hire? But w e, 'as a people, will be benefined thereby; When we nominate men to the Directorship , we will be careful to nominate and elect men-. Who will do , credit - to their positions, if are interested conjointly with them.: would not detract one particle from ity of many orour. Directors, or giitethetti less credit than is their. due ; but ittia that to give , those, and such as they a fair recompense-for their manifold labors„- wo greatly enhance their : value both to us, . to 'our 'children, and to p . osterity. 'Ruch of interest can be thrown into this snbieeti and-we hope to hear the opinions of others_ more capable of discussing it than we are.., rotrru. : 6ITR.STIOI7 O.OaNE,B 1. What has hecolne of the chairman of the. Schuylkill County Educational. Assoclatithi,- "0 C. T.? „ 2. Should we , have , class drills at our Coun t ty Institute ? S. Should aged teactien have a pension . - 100 00 22 50 22 5 . 0 ; 1