The miners' journal. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1870-1873, March 12, 1870, Image 2

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    II
iSii
FOttTY-SIXTH Y . Wt. , j .
1;
NOTICES wm a taa•mit Airtafticarl "`a `lad'
ks• 11, r as% liar, titagia Worms; 21 *lrts • 1 . 1 •• far ala
• foripvelp Szectissi.. per
• •
BAIN - 'N' - *.—Bookaillets sad Stadostem,Priti
tera awl litadeza,..W Casts! iiitteeti:pt,mille, Pa.
,_,.
lin -- 46' ,o*.itok-,
SATURDAY, ItARCH 12, met
. .
Titr., *lc •
/, OLIELYULL 1s- Pepe. d eiree t 3r Walwreit_Y•
- Mt
m umuts, Awl furnished to subseriberant r :3 Perantion 3 . " 3
aacreet. or Ft tr not.paLd La etteszion . .
clan3if3misctufrrioxs-nrveßattLy IX 4tDVILIIeIt
3 Co33esto one address, 07 00 1 .LL Cortes td one awasi,ll3 o 0 0
1 1 - Is r 4 -.‘ - - " al (le
t
I To News Desk./ ft 00 per 100 . Coptes.lakah.. • '
_To nisters and ScAlool Tear - beta we will Inrnisti the
RAMIN - by matt, at 111 10 per ansnixn, in advance : other
wlee at rates. . . •
•
I4IiID • • •
AILY SIMi:IIS - JOVICIAL 13 poh43ked lerer7
weeit - 41nyrnomIng, bastmlare
TERMS-I"en cents per wfe l t r =te to the carder or
atent 01 whom tt Is served. •
Vtrttn-rPaisble In -Mtrartee, one year. V, O 4 Nix,
irtima ir, 5; three , montha 4 Ll SO.
- , •
itALLY A!...13 ve;r-f.a.LY hillglielf IBLIt-VA.LI 7 SO pm
Innato. lit advance; 14 to for Mx months.
. '•l' • . - BANNAN 41' RAMSEY. PatZsiuirir.
. .
.---
THE:: MINERS' JcW1L. 14 14,1, .. ' '
'COAL STATISTICAL REGISTER FOR Js7o,
.
'•.7-fiii. ...M.l.'"lrra JorkKAL C 124.1. ffrettatc4l , Rittil•
iota rod 1.470;* will be boned, ..
' '
~
L. i... Tit tiRINCIA I!. MAU .
I* Mil; • •
ati&flut be obtained Of 't,. i _ .
Trance& Btu*. &Oo ..............Phnumpiiia,
I. V* NOBITAND,- .......... -.....-New York,
- A. Wn.5.i.kxt,..... .... ----110stou,
and by mail from thuotlice of publication. ' ,
• , Sitigic CePiee..---.......---........_: ..... .....15 -vita,
I,
I - ' s.Ticopits lor cornms. • •
Ttie coil Statistics for The year LW togethei withj
as aftle'le on •Or causes of the high prices of A n .,
thrt4ite.coal In 1663 and 1669. A tabular statement,'
of the Coal Trade from its commencement. Also,
tabtxlar statement of all the collieries of ISchuylkill
County, the land owners and lessoei, the Mai
;milted, depth, capacity, number of men employed,
- and',the veins worked.Us far as designated. Invest.
'fnetits required to secure a stipply of coal on the .
skaboard. The progress of Schuylkill County, and 14
Investments. Improrern_ents progressing at colilet k •
les,.! The development of the Southern portion of the
Schuylkill coal field. Best mode of developing and
°piping up the Bituminous coal fields of Pennsyl
vania.. A plan for working the Mammoth Vein ail
,
ventageously. Death' In the coal mines.' Exper).
meats with safety lamps. Arbitration In England.
igelnulktli the Banner County of the Republic.
Akio, stetistics4of the, Iron trade, with remarks oa
the same, together with a number of other articles,
al} of which will be thund interesting to thesiebeir
reader.
iite.L‘-sne of the 4 Begister" has been delayed in
'coder ib.. f t thaew Ventilation Bill and a Wire
"TOular atatcnient initlit be added. •
•
•.
TIIE DDITIOAAL, LAW J:I:DOE
. 1 : BUSINESS VENTILATED. •
.
T , AsT , week we promised . to givesi-histpry'
• -L-J of the inside' movements; cOtinneeted
With the efforts tofetair additional 14w judge
,
•. for this DiStriet, and 'We must proceed to ful
-Ipl it. .
•
.About two yeais•after gr. John W. Rylin, ,
brother of the Presiding Judge of the hid 1
;'Court, came to this - County and commened,l
Practicing at the Bar„eonsidemble ill.s.salis-,1
;faction was created among the, n3emherft of.'
the legal profession, in fact we might. ray.
' ; thaVeight-tentlis of them were dissatisfied,
'in' consequence of the_ popular Impre s sion
,which existed hi reference to the supposed .
influence of,Mr. Ryan with the Court, which
I,lnapresSicei largely increased his', practice to.
the detriment ef . his fellow members oft t the
• r Bar. The mass of the. Demoetatie -lawyers
I were quite as much,,if not more, dissatis,kfied
. With this state of affairs than the Republican
. : mem.hers of ' thsßar.• ~ 1 .
; - From this erase a quiet effort to have a
law enacted to prOhibit a lawyer from Pray
-1 Using in a t'ourt over which his brotlie pre
-i•-,,.sidels.. This failed. Then a Plan was (frig'-
',
noted, in vf Wilt both Democratic and , Be.
publican ittor,yers participated, to ;halve • a
i pgirlet Court established, the - (Melt of
. which was to try all civiLcauses invo wing
•; t.-:lltin and upwards. We `approved of; this
1 Dian., But it was. not carried- out, in chase- •
13 Oence of this Democratic lawyers lacking
! . backbone, anti being fearful that they would
; . suffer iCtite) .i : Retest publicly in the matter.
Things , went on in. this way iwitii-.
i- oat any • rehange, until the. ' period
arrived in'; the history of our four
;; ty, • .vhdri . ..tiiiurdeiii • and robberle be
came so frequent that it . was
. nee-esaarY
i to apply fof legislation to preserve" the, lives
-and propertyfill the people. At thisfunetiOn
the Dernoeratie irtenthers of the Mir aPplied!
for an -additional law judge. We (qd not;
: . see h'ow that was going to remedy the state;
of the criminal business of the County, and
we took the matter up; and •wlth the laid of
several of our citizens,' we gave our whtilesext
' - ertion• to the matter and pushed fitrouglP r .tivq
: . bills. ; ;_:'est4ilisliing a ::separate CiliMinel,
Court and l a Police Bill, against the i t united
exertions of every Democrat le inerniwr of'the
- Lettish:dine, who made.it a party qUeslierf•
which we accepted, and aiso a few Itepilldicailt
members who : belonged to a, ring in the Sera' r
- ' ate, although the large body of the !Dento.!
(tat I e-prop erty • holders i tithe ' c.'onnty,..faVetr
ed theshille; The latter they could het pea
- veat gol rig; in tf) operi'4On, but the former was
- impeded-.by he factious or t o,,iticdi of the
- old Court,- A id this, in the fsoe of the fact,
which wo • assert fearlessly, that or l igthally
vorne portion of the Democratic lawyers fa
. vored- the iiew . , Criminal Court 'endure :Pollee
bill; and that to-day,lf Judge GreensCOT
was'irt Lill operation, three-fourths O f those
• lawygis Would zinhertpractice in it ,
ii;
Itheiein
..
• the other.' ..-!- = • . , ; : -
-,,• ;I' ~.•••• ~
• A S f riort time:S a
ince another move ttasina46
b)' setie Demeeratic lawyer,s to reviyerit this
session-of the Legislature thequealionofi a
.. 'District Court. But afte,r entritt.4l - riti tile .
'matter, -they:came to the : conclusion that
. if
I they pressed - it pUbliely they would' create a
fight in their party-in this County, :and they
• ; dropped it. The nexithovement W4,throuiell
• !blandishments on the part of ; scree of the
•., Democratic lawyers 'to inveigle the!Republi-
Cab.. lawyers info the scheme' 4 apply=
' Ingter, enadditiOnal law Judge. ' This l e4to '
: the holding of a, meeting by the members of
- the Bar of both.political parties, 'atl whiCh it
was understood that steps would be taken to
' put Judge Green's Court into operation.. But
• from this arrangement several of, the Deir3O
. vratic lawyers who had'aecepted . .i it, 'again
backed otff, anti the maw of the Republican
•-'3;e4 - Yers eeasedlo eorisielfr them..id : tea further
2 ideu p hed- With the rtit4;eirient,• and - - did itot
. ()awe to haye their narnei.used ht ilai l ris
bnrg; in favor-of a third lel •JUdge. after
' the Demoerats backed out ,Iris stated. Yet
. ...their names were used'i..aftetwartisl at
' - ' l i.liarileburg without their desire ,pr: knPwl- .:
.. edge, In favtir Tot the: *additional ;law judge
businesi. 'The'whole-matterWasitifterwanis
, managed by the leaders in the .Most secret]
•ixtanner, : unknown even to many of. the Re-1
. :: - . ptibllean lawyers, and scarcely a'aingletll- .
•-: vidual outside Of the Bar.: Prot:apes; of j •In Owl,
-,• - . lndgibip . were made to • some, land athfr
promlies Were made tr . ,' different peliott:s . ; ,
. ' if they would suffer; themselves Ito be n*l '
• - quietly for kncha ptirpose; and l a bull was
sent to Harlisbu r g to be-pushed through the
_ Legislature itt a day; and 'get 'Wl:signed - be-
' A
. fore a ' Single . remonstrance C6ialil reach the .
. ..Legislature or the Governor : lust the'
mesanie. s-tlf :the Legislation - right in
i Itself, the Inearits alone - tak : :to put it
.1 :through ought to -eccitre its deft l Without'
;? -1 any other of eetioa whatever. J :• ' ; .
J 4 ' 1 li'lie idea ut the Deritoer,atle praiectorS Was
to create a tight: in the Republican party and
. : divide it ; - but the result of thelf inveigling
' :and inisrer,resentatiti`n, although backed by
. , •...
, .. hare-faced lying,?' viii nit - result in damaging
•-- the Republican p rty one iota, biatiWilt tend
• to'strengilien ith : eater, and i will ir4oll
• • ::• On Weir. own heads. If . a -co u ple of ' them
should . gp„. to' the Democracy It'ethln!f : the
• .Republieapi would be .largely the gainers: .
•••• .-- Back upon the Democracy we hail the
• - '-Scheme by which they hoped tend the.Re-'
c,-publican party :of ,Schuylkill ,County. , Let
- thena tlghtthe additional laWititlge business
• to the bitter end, but we do not, believe they
-% '''olll get their bill enacted into it!law after an
, .
• Abair efforts, for We do.not belhive'thut Gov::
~ernor Geary Will appmite ,si hilt, even if it
~. should , pass both branch thLegisiatgre '
, . . to.. ape TI!REE LAW JXTDGF,i3 TO
_ . 801 WYLY . ..ILL COGZ7I7, ; While we have i
(-:: Judge, paid out of, the State 'tieriittri, Who" -
- .• h doing -nettling, - Siniply . *causer those
sit* :ask - - for .the ' :additional li 'judge 'hive
• ; , tamaphi4 the laws under their feet and refuse
• . 'to:permit him. to act ;. arkd a l souppaSe the
• - -
passage' ofA :vomit Stik_rdensent to :put, the
i l, ,'. Criminal : Court , in operation,' : kgardlese of
• - thy frequent ' 9*11.441 marls 01 the SuPrente
• .tinintsrpereli to cause dutay, whiehomis 0 7 '
reedy pronounced the Court. :I*l and Con :
.sttbtioaal. . I ..,
.., This t3upp4pient takes aba t rourteeu kif
:.,
the fifteett.*Rehs .4 trniitiiid.. .41)A.04 from
t
the'prefient .Court, which wilf :give.' it, that
• Much additional time to atteud to the Civil
businesslt also pres.the'preantJutho the
...._
. .
.., .._ - - - • . I: ': -, '
•
privilege of inviting the Judge of the Crinti.
teal
__Court to aloha in di arching theerimins4
hamitatos, If heis tooidrich overworkedithe
rinte4s Is dune in Dauphin and Lebanon
runties.
,This Supplement all the Demo- 1
mats oppose to a men, and also the' few R‘ ,
OnblimMelawYers c4rtiged in this very ques•
tionable buidneas, tci.say the least of it, will
inot give it one lota of support; and then
'have the impudence and assurance to delib
erately state that the removal of one-Wf of
the business from the present count will not
i'rteilitate the civil bueineas of that court apar
t title: If this is not treating the court in Path
era disparaging at:inner:we dnnot know the
meaning of the English language. Wethink
the Judge, under such representations, 'will
soon be amstrained to cry out,as others have
done before, "save' me
- from my friends."
This would affe r r i 4 s iZesiredrellef, anti we
believe that the of such a measure
will meet the approbation of nine-tenths pf
the people, and of a large portion of the
members of the Bar. We believe that iFe
.speak the real sentinient of a majority of the
lawyers of WAS parties whatever They may
assert to the contrary. 'We know that nine
tenths of the - Republican latiyem Would
sonnet have . Judge Green's court' in opera
tion with the powers asked for, than to have
the additional law - judge, under eiisting
circumstances:. And the Democratic
lawyers who really wish for reform in the
existing state o 7 could have 4t if they
only had the iiquisite backbone to' support
their'desires, Wad were not so easily antiihil
ated at the' cry of "shoo fly."
This in 'brief, , is' an outline of the history
of the inovemetr4 — previou to and embrac
ing the efforts obtain an additional law
judgi, and to defeat the going into operation
of the Criminal Court. When we, look at
the dissatisfaction even. felt by . Democratic
lawyers, and their desire for a change, but
their lack of courage to make it at ; the ob 7
Stacies thrown into the way of the Criminal.
Court, when the Judge is w Ming and anxious
to discharge his judicial duties • when we see
the County Treasury plundered to pay large
fees to oppose the . wishes of the people in
this matter ; , when. we see an effort made to
cast a fire-brand into the Republican ranks
and divide the party; 'and finally when we
see the necessity' to the continued preserva
tion of life and propertY .in this Platter, we
appeal to the community if we are not right
in moving' in this matter actively, and in op
posing with all our strength the effort which,
concocted in secret and sprungupOn 'the peo
ple, propose! to foist upon an unwilling peo-,
plea third law judge in this district and thus
plunder the State• Treasury' . We know
that we are right in this matter, and we also
know that we are sustained by the sentiment
of nine-tenths of the people of Schuylkill
County, and of a large pertlon of the mem
bers of the Ran
tn concluding this necessarily brief article
n this subject, in consequence'oiour crowd
ed space, we might state that on Thursday
last the Crilminal. Court was. up - before the
Supreme Cdurt, - and from what we learn •tile
lmpreasion l is that the decision wthl
.be to
hroW•the -Criminal business of the. district
Into the new Court. The passage of the, Sup
i.olement before the I.eglslaUire will fix the
status of the-Court, intlependept of any de
piston whatever, since the Ccturt, .has . been,
Pronotineed legal by 'the Supreme 'Court.
. . .
. .
, . .
,:,
Tar. follipwing atitele watt'•writtati two
weeks ago Ibut .was erbwtietl out _ by our
large y.rest, of statistiaS: . •:. • . . ...-
. .
THE,k7IA - A t y.CE.'!` OF THE CO Cr 2171
flifiE last 'Coiuity 'statement shows the
1 : cleanest .balanee sheet ive have. known
for twenty years, thanato the eiertions in
a great measure of Conrad Seltzer., the
late County Treasurer , assisted.by this
,four-'
, Mr. Seltzer got.- in during the year
$1 , 34,000 - of back_tmlebtedne&s, also • back
County taxe.sdu s e by collectors, amounting
to 5146,431. Ekithe of the amounts dpe . .by
delinquent collectors ran back for ten and
twelve years. TheTdeht - of the County hai
been reduced to, V34;592, the intemstbn which
is tc_itttle overt $5,006. ; List year'the IntOrest
account paid was iceariy and money
had to Id pgprowed while large sums Were
standing qut due by collectors, which Might
to have been paid in long since. On the flintt
of this yoat there were outstanding -Only.
-2,931 taxes ail, and. collectable un 401-
s:cafes, previous:: toi the - last. The aggregate
amount due
. .by• (~ o llectors is some '.;- s - 5d1961).
There will al wal.i be a certain amount-of
taxes due and Mie t olleeted 'at the elose-ot the
year, but it,' should never . ' exceed ~$'25,00 or
530,000. Last 'yeatal experience shows that
the dupheates:: can with pro Per. exertion on
the part of ill'eofieetorts - be closely collected,
and as the Summer, arid Fall scions are, the
best in thji regionithey shoUld be got in be
fore. Winter, when tits cOal business nearly
all sWspended. ' . . •
The debt now is light and We thlEd,i; that It
should be Wiped out` gradually': during the
next two yeat?. It can: be done in that time,
and- the Coriantisaioners should reduee the
tares this year. It 'is not necessary to pay
the' debt•Offin one year, and we .hope that
they willtak4 the matter' into faVorible
con
sideration. : ' ,
Great-Traise is due Mr. geltzer; and the
JOCANAL-1124it come in k lAr a ' . falr share of
_
credit, Tor.•this happily chaiigeti state of af ?
fairs.' When the work was commenced we
had to meet the ' , opposition of the Commis.
thoners, but ive.are glad to state that the in
dications are that the reforms inaugurated
by Mr. Seltzer Will be continued by,
m the pre
sent Commissioners. We hope they
and no paper will give them more sredit, or
open its columns to them or to the , present.
Treasurer, to stir up delinquent colleetors,-
or l forother 'useful serviees In the interest of
the public, ;more quickly than the 311NERS'
JfIrRNA.L. Our object has- been ko• cheek
all evils-in 'County affairs, whether due to
Democrats or Republicans. We hammered
iway.at the Alias House until.we had tile
tisfaction of 'seeing the, expenditures of
that built/Alm reduced"from $lOO,OOO tO
;537,000 per i .rtnnard. We think :we are safe
sayingthat; the '`course of. the lkinvEns'.
~ Tounxat. in thesemattera, has saved thetax
ifittyete of the COunty at least :50,000 iyear.
While we were, doing this service we were
abused and punished by, withdrawal of pat
ronage, but out reward is the knowledge
that we have *rendered efficient service in •
this direction. •
We congtatukt' te the taxpayers en the im•
proved .condition of the finances of the
County,' and hope to See the state ot affairs
continued. We Will commend officers
whettierlDemocrats c Republicans, when
they do 'right, and condemn them fearlesily
when they do rong.. Andlor the right the
columns of the JOURNAL
.will always be
open. • . -
• TILE r-sA,Armyo PRIVILEGE
4110.2%:,
.
The. Poit Master General has sent a com
munication to the Senate in 'which he pre
sent me new, and interesting tact* in regard
tolfie abolition ot theiranking privilege. Ifte
ports received fem. busufreil and tlity4our
limit offices show at the 4Oe Matter sent from
those odides d Tantiab.,would have paid,
m . 1
at regular
. postap,. $159,7M. Re esd
ul
matevthat the entire cost of the free matter sent
during Ontuiry mutt have been Polly' $200,000,
which would 0-e $2,400,000 for the whole year.
Mr. Creaswell reiterates the statement which be
made in his last - annual report that the privile
• gee of the franking privilege aregrOsidy abused,
and re*ews his . earnest recommendation Malt
be abolished. He. tun_ the frankness ,to state
that eevoral importanfreforma are needed and
demanded to make our postal intrvice worthy of
tine Government and the people, but be Jaya
that we cannot have these reforms so long as
the franking privilege continues.
The postal service of this country certain Vis
not What it ought to be, and it is*.the height of
hilly to *Row the Congressmen to send tops of
spoacbes and bound volumes through the mails
at the expense Odle whole country and to the
detriment of the efficiency and cheapness of the
whole postal service. Only a few days 'ego a
Vermont Senator had the assumption 10 claim
that the franking privilege ought to beretained,
because it was the means by which the people
learned what their Representatives end Sense
tors were doing. A more ridleulonit and un
truthful argument could . hardly be pat forth,-
and Mr. /Condi must have a - p of
his conetitizeney if he thinks theYwl eve
such Udic aiallia‘ When '. people Want to find
out . wkek. their
,Congresitmen = ers doing they
read seamy otowspeper, and ice say now, whet'
we bet" oincitiafetto - thet„ the a press of Oda'
country - has dNe a* , mitils 41 liecetwOty for
the prilitin_gefran escarp . 1 *Mg doe
tunents. . mfavor is to bee . r-7 In lignett
as a meditun of egnuntuilisitien „ between.
grew sad Ate keep). U. ahead heiffitnrn • to -
„newillaitiera.' Ant Otero In Iteitheerowes' nor,
lustim i l l t 4h . l. EOM', Mair 4 00 1 / 1 1di .
111' Utter
Usenet' the mew 14 order 'that it lbw , penalise
MO' hergenerinndy stippled witlitintokto dot*
maribilree :of tnitiense.-.
the
044
eral }steady to recommend, the POMO Ig a
redn=bsterpMtwe to two cents es soot as i
the ' trprteliege U out -of the try, and
1 4
i
_
THE,' tOtTATIAL • .
_ _ •
• *'• • • —"n!!..7
tut& a redaction as that Will leertelelY be inere .
ofs benefit to the people than the chance of 00. ,
emictually receiving & puhfic document tree of i
We eimiorge every Iwol4 of the abovewidch
trees:trio from the scruithan Ermcia.leA.4-
The Peieh,Ptagigh all Oft . ceeireledeFilYwd
latgislatiee proceedatga ofimportanne l tleni
'before the documente aralibut out trout!-
peas. ' And besidei it is *et only the anargitt
that the mails have to wry free, but it will
save manly, if net quite* ;million of dollars
in publishing the . , . ;,ents that woutil*
be published if them ~.. hers were not per
mitted to frank them to !heir constituenti for
political purls:met, and Or which the people
are taxed. -There area few documents that
ought to be published;; but let Congress
print them at a very Iciar rite, such al the
Agricultural Report, the , Patent Ofilce Re
port, and gentian' to '. at. a hav rate,
and print the price on books at ;Which
they are to be sold, a lto . trig the booksellers
r
a small percentage f .the printed price,
and then they would ba scattered ail overthe
ccantrY. Then those aim &Sire them could
get them insteadtof litiir being gent to : par
ties who care nothing about them, and .who
in many instances sett them to thoge who
desire them and eaten t get them because
they happen to be of opposite politics. Thelte
ports of the English Parliament are , pub-
Lished and sold by the'booksellers in many
instances. 1, : i
The Postmaster General states ihet so
many newspapers
the,
outside Of the
mall on railroads, , ' all the revenge.de
rived from postage On Uewspapers and pamph
lets, does not, rea_2ll W,OOO a Year,;and he'
very properly suggesta that the interests of
all classes would be b4st subserved by per
mining all neWspaper, to pass' thrOugh, the
mail free: - - , I •
The Contract for printing the: DAus
O4u3E, ought, to be idiscontintted, ; and the
work performed in the Government Printing
Office. This could be done cheaper 'than ft
is now done by the (14.0nE; • Leave out all
buneomb speechei made for political effeet,
and let the membersipiiiit and pay: for them
out of their own pocit'4, and ti . e will guntn
tee that one, half the 'speeches now made,
,would not be delivered, and the public busi
ness would be greatly facilitated.
-.There are very few good speeche made -on
questions of public , policy, and the people
would prefer really a synopsis of at least
three-fourths of 'them to reading them,At
length. Reform is the order of, the day.
Let members of Congress heed the voice of
the people on this subject.
PROTECTION TO AMERICAN IN
DUSTRE
SPEECH l)F SENATOR 0411E1/014 DELIVERED
• Is THE UNITED STATES SENATE ON
• MONDAY, Mmten 7ru 1870
•
TlCthe United State 4 Senate, on the 7th
instant, Senator . Cameron op4resenting
petitlonfrom Schuylkill f..'oun4y,9E HUN
.
01tED AND SIXTY FEET ris - LEPf(ftu,---the se-
Cold largest petition ever. presented to Con-,
giess.,- , —in asking for - Protection to. American
.Industry, not, to Anthracite Coal which
needs no direct protecAion, but tnaillriteret,,
made the (Allowing Admirable sOech :
Ma. ParsSDENT: : Presenting this petiticutl
wish to can the attention of Senators to the int
eating region frtim which it corned, and :to' submit
some facts concerning its wonderful deVelopment;
trusting thatthe exhibit will proyeaseful by intine
tng this LiO4y to reflect on the vast' interests now
held In the anthracite anti otter coal-producing ter•
ritory of the country. lam not tarit4olut hope that
an intelligent study of this subject will thilw, the
importance of well legislation as shalloontlnue the
development of the coal Gelds of the whole country,
and so prevent the - destruction of the: industries
.whleh furnish a market for thts important article,
and mainly depend on its production.-
•
All that rattail recount has taken pincewithininy
own memory end wider my own -übseryation,
When I was a young luau the lard from Which such
vast wealth has, been extract. l Weil a wilderness.
It could be bought for fifteen or tyreuty - cents nu
acre, and no one would have it at:any price., 'ropey
the taxes on it-With deemed folly and extmvalpinCe.
Then population was sparse and comfort unknown.
-Now thia.whole resin; teems with busy throng,
and tt has become the hliode c,t um fence, Intelli
gence, and refinement, On the Wilt's/malice the
• unending labor or well-paid men goes on, 'and far
down in the Mines the busy scents of the tipper
world en. mpesstpti:
The anthracite - `coal rf•Si.on of PenAliyivanial--
which comprises all of anYcniPert#o9 in 11,8 court
try—is confined within an area 'co %hate mules.
or XV,OOO acres. 1. state thls now t that ir may bel.,re
membered when I come to speak of the enormous
production which has been attained, anti the vast
capital which fa now invested In this coal territciry.
I preaentethe increase In mined coal, end popula
tion, ho Schuylkill b ounty, Pennsylvania, giving
the figures u - ii 4 critical neetirfief : while, as to the'
. population direen..Y sidist i splg end attributab to
i• the mining interests in t v 61114111411 Tarts ofthe
hard coal region, I estimate from tollathe data and
an intimate knowledgeof the locality ands person
al obscrya3ion of the subject. • ;
The yeasiti7o marked the beginning of anthracite
coal mining in Mir - coyntry. .The population of the
County of seliuylkill—behde reierred:h.o—und the
number of tons mined Were as follows: at the_
of ecton'ilecade since : -
tear. • 1-
1,1311
/Sin...
1.3 Z... ... ' ' : • 01,•loi • 1,712,)7
190,173 01
3,V0A16
12170 • 1' ' 1;13,01 4,7lswif
The populatlon'and productior) for The same period
In the entire ';CO square Mlles of anthmeite coal
lands were as follows, the population being' esti
mated at a low figure, and, I think, upon a basis
st le1:1,- will bear 11te - closest Investigation suceer,s
fu ly 4-- -
A
, t.-... . Tens -
romilatfon. Mined.
. • .
' „
_HA) ;iv 335
-3r ex Hear. t
1330. .
' ' 15 OW 174,73-I
' go;oto P ,64,3.,4
1350 ~,., ~.........- ........... . ..... .. .......... ... 130,000 3,3,56,0)
1,330.-.. f. . : ......... 220,1110 8,412,918
1370 ..... :-....: 350,0011 15,7Z1,03U
• The arnhUnt Of ihn,braCite COM yet In the earth is
as follows, the area' and the 1 / 4 1Ckness Of tho veins
being accurately known :
r Depth Of . •
- . ' ' square coal, . .
miles. yards. Tons. •
Central Coal fields...-. 128" 16 5,554,a51,0uu
boutheria ptsil Beds_ ISO 2.5 ; 11.309,34'40W
Northern coal g1a,140. 199 - 13 ' 9176 aP , OM
Total 1170. • •28,343,C7,000
m
Deduct one-half waste in ining.......ig,171,,500
- -
--which leaves of marketable coal 13,1748%,54X)
tons, or a deposit equal to an annual. supply of 2u,-
•000,01 k tons for. yeafti, and of vastly greater value
than all tha ialtietal deposits of tnanY nations •of
the earth, andd by no meansstmterriptibie nations
ither. f •
111311% vast •as this undeveroped wealth is, and
clashing as Its development Liss been, it Is but a
trifle when compared to the bituminous coal de
positis of our country, or Indeed of Pennsylvania.
Within circle of one hundred miles, of which
Pittsburg,, in the western extremity. of Illy State, is
the benD.e, there is enough bituminous coal In the
'earth to pay ott` the natlOnel debts Of all the gov
ernments estimated,, orld many times Over. Anil it
has been from geological surveys, that
this coal would pay our national debt fifty-four
timett if Its stupendous value could, be realized at
once. This, you will please remember, in West
ern Pennsylvania:alone, and only comprises one
description of tv particular 'wealth, which is aut.;
ronntied, and to some extent dwarfed, by other won
derfurresources In that section of our State.
• It isimpossible to overestittudelhe value of this
wealth, er its reiallons to other industries. It is to
day the foundation of ,our wealth, and a glance at
the distributiOn of bituminous coal Over the coun
try Indicates clearly to my mind 'that development
of this single interest Is the basis for a prosperity,
under Wise laws, 'which would dr, mare than any
thing else to render to independent of every ex tar
nal Influence, however Ittnight be exerted. -
The follow Lug table will show the area of the bitu
minous and cannel coal deposits or• the country, as
far as is ecurately known; .
Penury' ......
Wort .... .....
East .... ....... .....
North Carolina
Goorgia—.-- • .;
Indian;
Missouri_
$~ m~ ....c.......
Indian
he Ft." -- ' or-
West of
1 rte i oeki
......
Showing a total squat* nines
And to Mhi must be added of tertiary . cools
- around the Rocky Mountains-----.... 230,000
Making' a grand total of. . 014,2141
square miles of out within "Our boriler& — or more
than thirty-one them as much as there is in Penn.`
sylvanha together with WO mire tulles of anthra
cite 'in Rhode Island and its, and 100
square miles in Oregon these, however, are not
immat denoidts;and are orrery little value.'
statisties &re taken from Daddow's "Coal,
Iran and 014" and may be deeined aareltableas any
work on the in
attainable to the struleut of
such anklet Thom relating to the anthracite coal
are Ihipplied by Dir. Bannan, who for Any years has
observed and studied thestddeut. '
in Pennsylvania, notwittunanding her ruggedsm
face and her indnerotla mountain challia—in spite
of the fict.thata tulientrailmed at State costs
in=times samba ea In some others, we MK , have
miles atrailinad than any
_other State In,the
on, while our amitaktnvested In these .far our
pones t
Lam of
ting In the aggre
gate to NCO • • _ - ' •
4s an of iulattiiial Indeveloping
nearly everydeecription internal 4ltiribrinimient.
let me caliymisettentbist4o the Oct • Mat, to carry
our fictiuylmit anthracite coals to market, we have
invaded In--
Ounde—.— ' . • 22,000,000
/dieing operatiiii; Ammo
0 10 . 00 010
ln we ,
•
g= e olo.
WOW
' +l. grlindWdeloa ,
Iles amnesia :tasseled - 1n Una tvaproyegasss 2llldooo aOw ,00Ct
sending our trltundnona coat, leeward I beve up
isteabit Of accaratio detang; bot It to eery
large. Foe- she gramme area. and the gyeldier dir
tones Leland ateobleh our matt dr- blUnaluous cad
ns abeed. in es
y y d a_vtaWir +=lay for
bon. The , descrlylites dortag il M l Z
your-was 14,1 Als Sena. and 'war: chledrittolneed,
nom tba Ruda or thensaylvablia.
And - whlletthe lawmatt=nAboyera
it one linos solanpne In Mem . this
utarltaddinbeesalmillabr =AuiciLlese Met"'
seta, audio well wortror • Tbe Into
inhume coat la iltnittad /arta - 4batuterlatfrt ter ,
glWater
we
s anwasaT li latag and Ilarriap44llll bard,
coal' - ltia lobs* nooVez of aA =
nalog
- • in twartig • the adrau she
Ind* , ael Coat , rely tet
• • • • • • testleensonsasse.
maisairsibi
tolititialt7OUSO
•wttba • ,
betwassailenuweror fra
=O. 'Ow ark Ocairoup
and bonla limusentalsg..
1 111 3 .- tU l".l r -- %T ata ' i d et2i
bare t
~ • _
Itiassitibittlikelbanalif Ildllatelithit - • ....., 1 ,..1,. -
.
aleinbert , et woollen sebitareer -Oat •
" Int lisollk
ill atin . 411 ==•in ' '
ander thold.- ,-ef't Trade",l6rA 'TUB/ . BIS' •
Betrenne." ,
/ hntrealralistirlideeriad to Att. iaty With
Spate has Mare Wier of listimed any OHM;
and that theorist pertalle is 'than in other
States; and / turve.lanike • •attntalraptlestlier
te. the Coal =Mum BMW, nage* this hestadree
the sables& let are add another OM whit win
doobtless be lateresth6g. Beneath the atortness, rites
dawn lathe
tt uill=f i r the inerearee ea
n lOC c , n t ri vi t ta l t
s a i r ot 3eaM threctte retinas more than mike 01
ieintbsd the sigaregele of railways
lathe State. I maybe inere'Aaseemanil in
Vale WM benne Senators by aentrings them Plae &
them subterranean railways itoni4 If formed into
onecontfrusaus lute, leech front to Washing
ton t or they would Win a double track road from
hereto New York, and back again Wilbert, lepeak.
While the suirleet, on:which I now . address 3ro. is
of minteral Impertanee, I have eonfined ray illustra
tions entirely within my native State. , The perr_
soul knowledge and . farniliarity I proems in rela
tion to the anineet.'as it has developed about my
house; aadaho the. higbrr degree of skill that 'has
been attained with - us than In other :rations has
governed ree in Li o nign. - And, o itc= that
course, I al l atteto th e title" •
and Pittsburx in Pe as eminently tria
-1 trative of the b-m bene fi ts f l owingrogs cast, as shown
in creating, and maltstaining home manufacturer
and home Oadrustry. . When. the eorrunerclal Inter
estitof the country were transferred to New York,
and Philadelphia lostlier supremacy as, the empo
rium of the nation, her people at once directed
their attention to the creation of the. wares and,
fabrics which she had 'formerly been content to ex
alige. The result is that inslatd of sinking tinder
the withdrawal of conmerce she is now the greatest
manufacturing citf on , the continent. She has a
better led, better clothed, end better pad, torpults
tine than any city in this' country. And she has
the bent bowed population of any city on the
globe. .
Second to Philadelphia in this lases particular
(and In iron)ent of. her products second to PbUts
delPhin is Pl4stralit. in the wester& part of
the State 4in part, rapreseet. Here is .the great
workshop of our ;iron manufactures. And here
too. as to Mir eastern city, the same natural
Wealth—ced—Larms the bests and foundation of her
=ty. Here is to bet seen thrift, industry, In
me, admirable schools, marnalfloent ihurclaes,
noble enmities, end freedom as near perfect as can
be found an here. While teas than baitss-sllosen
British were sweeping one exornerne from
every sea, this citysent one continual stream of
cannon, shot and es, and heroic men.tosave
the nation's life tram the greetw. danger which
ever has, or every can threaten it And while our
_commercial Marine sunk under its few and not very
formidable assailants, this busy hive of labor and
industry sent yon the means of utterly destroying
the mightiest armies, except our own, which ever
waged war. Our blockade was maintained alone by
the cook shipped from the wharves of Philadel phia
to one naval vessels at their stations. The batrlgof
Gettysburg prevented the destruction of the anthra
cite coal mines. It also prevented the destruction
wonblockade. And that crowning - victory was
because in stale Pert* Of ottr conntry puc-p
live indeStry eillitile to place greaft-arudes inthe
field, sed to supply tome with the nlaterial of war.
To-day the Inadequate protection given to itpre-:
vents universal .bankruptcy and national shame.
Adequate protection will secure to us everything
whicn this tiovernment needs •
As a means of national welfare, assault, defenie, ;
and maintenance, I contrast the two, and, seemi ng- 1
ly, antagonistic interests of commerce and p ac-
tion ; and I shall not shrink from a candid exami
nation of their relatlee importetlett to our Country
In either peace or war. _
And I will go further. lam content by this com
parison, to test this whole
question. I insist that the
policy of protection is the true policy to apply for
securing the development of every source of wealth,
eommeree includa. -By this wise pollor the farmer
puts in his pocket as profits the freight he must now
pay to bring his crops to market, for the workshops
springing up all over the country, under this policy
of protection., brings the market to his barn-door.
,The transporter, losing this source of inmme, finds it
more than made gocs4 by the ebundent freightage
pouting front thousands of distant workshops Mere
** part of the country, seeking the seaboard and a
foreign market. And here, too, when our artisans at
tain a higherskill our machinery reaches perfection.,,
. and our ability to produce is fostered, you will find the
reliable foundation for • commerce Which, like that .
• of Great 'Britain since she developed her coal, will
aggressive and enduring, The workingman will
find his subsistence cheapened by tramterring his
dwelling to the teeming farm Ands from which he
must be fed, be he where he may. The churches,
schools, and"benevolent institutions nourish when
the mas4es who earn their bread by labor are folly
employed, cheaply fed and well paid. The revenue*
of the country are certain and generous then; and,
indeed, business in all' ramifications presPeis
when labor is prosperous. The capital of every na
lion Is its labor. When this is well end sofltably
When labor la sites all
invested all goes well.
i t
perish together in a common ruin.
These pet it lonerscome before you as rig no light
thing.. There ls - na selfishness in their prayer ; they
know they cannot be injured by competition, but
they see clearly that the department ar labor In
Which tliey are engaged qnderlies development and
happiness. They see that the high.itata of prosper
ity which marks the surrounding region of their
coal fields is trattabir to coal. They are not confined
ia their request by State lines or by local jealousy ;
they point out the way to make.every part of the
Country as prosperous as the fav'ored locality In
which they live, and they simply ask yoss to adopt
a national policy which shall benefit every part of
the country.- If the ecetiof Great Britain and of
Pennsylvania has bean the Wila sound prof'
pertly we Only ask yonlo do that , w hich will make
other States possessing the same blessing equally or
more prosperous. Render useint to their future de
velopment and happiness the 0 1 ,40 SWUM miles of
coal which underlies nearly every State in We
Union, and Pft use the benefits 'vouchsafed to our
people. rather than sptifn their. I
I now close with this imparfect reference to the
subject I have alluded to with elope that It will
-commend itself to the minds of fi nators, and - when
these great interests' are assailed that a candid and
conscientious inquiry will be made by each about
the justice and propriety hf crippling our now grow
ing manufacturers and producer 4 for the benefit of
a•nat Mu which, having attainedlgh perfection In
machinery, afmc,st ef gala= pow r In capital, and
.degraded the wages Of labef to a Olaf bordering on
ii
starvation, now seeks by free trade •ro" ttuike of us
only a enstouter for her workshops and a helpless
depend*t on her for the necessities of life and the
comfort- of clillizat ion. . 1 • i
MEI
ScrtoPt. LoiN.—The Echbot Board • have
applied to the . Legislature for authority - to
barrow .5.25,00 . to • build' f new Sehool
Houses. We learn also thltt the School
Board haVe authority aiready!to borrow nine
or ten thousand dollars; . Thie would make
ift
$35,000. The? have Cont. Cted to. build,a
,
new School House thisYea ; _ for four Schools. '
This wegld. secm to . lie stifficient for tete.
year, and sidlicient Nut'srari be ontalpeil.l4? -
build this Schotil this' year without any
further authority,to lorrios• money. The
price of every thing iir,inoW declining to a
gold basis, and theldca tif:;Contractlng for a
large Sehool House this'year is not only pre- ;
posterons but extravaitint; when In all prob.;
ability it can he built from; 20 to 2.5 per cent .
less next' "year than it can, be this. The
clamor cmites from the North East Ward for
alargeSchool House. : *w.i.iiinir„ under alp
the circumstances, they; ought to wait
another year when a Seheol House ought to
be erected on the lot the Board owns, and
we will advecate it then; but at present, In
the interest of tbs tax4atyprspf the Borough : .
we call upon our membent'ef the Legislature
to defeat any apillication for another loan to
build any morei l 'additlonal .School Houses
this year. '• • ' • ' ~- 1,
Tons.
POptilatiofi,
-- 465
ti;rni g 9,144
452,201
o Saturday—. . ....
6 Ehyru .
, 3 1oriday---7-- --
8 ........
9 .
10 Thursday.
11 Friday-
xAB.,— • 1 - 'ars
", 1870 ! sirm 3itoos CHANGEfi;
.
1.2' BArt - RDAT..i, 617 I 8 .'S ..n. ior.m. , ...
0 StnctiAY. -'....,.. 616 ' 6 4 , First
Vl.' 2 344 mi)
14 MoItDAT ......1 .6 14 I 6 5 ,First:q. ID 815 mo
-15 TrESDAY.,...i 612 1 6 6 'Full M. 17 856 mo
16 ViltnirEzDAN, 611. • U 8 , Last.q. 23 11 42 St*
17 Turusbay...; 6 9 1 6 9 New M. 81 V 2 e•
.e.
XS FRrDAY i 6 7 I 610
This (Saturday) evening, at 8 o'clock, free
choir rehearsal at Trinity Church.
To-morrO.Eloventh Stindsy of the year,
and second' fn Lent. /Day's length, 1/ hours and
48 minutes.
Scp
/5,030
0)
mom
- ,The pews of Trinity, church will be free to
morrow• night, anti every Sunday night here
after. ,-The vestry has" ao aecided. . •
.3,7130
• 170
13,703
7,100
8700
..... 21,000
•—•••
• 4,00 0000 s
/2
/2,GuO
10,002
3,000
•••-•
Among the nasal nominations recently made
are 11. D. Potts and fliram Parker, Jr., tieond
AssistantEmeneers; to be Assistant Engine era
Both of the , gentlemen , named are from this
Borongkt_,--
~.:Are are right glad to be able to say that ; the
e"homes" for the ministers , attending the Phila
delphia Conference, which meets in out; 'Bor
ough next Wedneedsy, have all been arrantred.r ,
We will publish a complete list of the same ,
next Monday morning. Every host will then
be able to see who his guest will be daring the
sojourn of the Conference.' •
- SAO
The Fuld, Detendere.—We call their lineup
Lion to the following sotiee:
- " • . PorrsviLLE, Mach 10,1110.
. The members of the Assoc:alike of the First' be
fenders of the Ifailonal Capital, will meet on liatur
day evening 7 124 3 1a: fa ih w e E arm s7 elado, ktot. tt l i.
for the. of tak steps to observe the Alp.
proaeh nf anniversary o the arrival of the compa
nies in =Langton, April 1141. •
H. C.l!raisi.,•iieerettu7. • ,-
Services in the Secotur Presbyterian-Church,'
by the' Rev. R. Hart, tomorrow- morning at
101 o'clock. •
There will also be a special meeting of the
Ltmerne Presbytery held in the same ChUrchl
on Toesdaytuml, at 4P. S. andwin be fo ll owed;
by inetallation services at II o'clock In the eve
ning. -The Roy. S. CI L og an of Scranton, will .
niePthe opening sermon_. The public are tor
invited. Seat* free to
• . :
• Ba.Patriak's DaiatbnuatiraUla.-364 Mak
aim its libseriville qquart us tolgite notice
that all Irishman sad. ?fil laas, who_de
di* to, ealabitte the nu of Mardi , In 'n,&• — • of
thaigtaisr4.o4,lo and Saha, Bt. Patrick„will
:4 ?s
at ao &tag by visiting
Pon that thiT, either as individuals
osi lamb* •gr 01111 (Meech ate.,
'1 I*reZ r ai aultA and exiles ;
potuati nvesdild celebrations
thal 9t sa illtuatrious a
EMG
P•
214 folloiing let*list of tadameahitteisre4
maintt~.in' i th4y,Ppitayffiq fkiiit Office, March
144g00n. • •••• •1: • •
• Rabat
ia
&ft_ ,
p i law Jae .:• - itrassetJgbit
. •-• • oft " litarilest Waal Thome , 1
vrs - llapiabith
_Tam*
1,4,, • Azov :xonierauftw,ThaiumNiisj.;lV!!..i.
.T• !Vows M i gunt:::7
MOWS Dipit, •
r • fartres
'4'
it! R!. 11 7 •
Reed &Hatters.
hIETECMOIJOQICAL TABLE
MARCH
A.M.KOOY i C
I
I S . ' %'°
IS M - 21
I 40 ; .12
IS SI
20 SI
20 .42 40
; •39 35
WEEKLY ALMANAC.
. •-,, . •
4aceddra . 7 ,maidius H
te30. 1 1 1 . • ik: dsisessulan tlfam onot
timithie llillnad utst
_ _, bui to Too d ot his imam en
' , fetes in. wiser.X ir.outst*r_
IS vidititt be teldi ' ' 'i lc i,. , .
-- _ Sherch.3.,
tat i - , .' • Twine, R: r ik W=lnt
• A&new IttArt,Mt v nr. ,
. W
"114441. 1 r e 11:it I=t4lsl""lindstere=sl2l,l4..3:4ll4—bel"ftlett'
'Us Kenra Kellspeny: ho.ftte t h e etel ",
4e r gilrileggelgt.- kind ln an I aft , iO .
In abespilfts• year eery, !magma
Id** ** Zsm iel t s le e We i r the terve
Vim,-
ithalPet
L imi l ag' gllce r n Aiwa istb.! `hick time. if
is to seasT :in endeavor LI opera
r aadlehoe for the speeeer Zethet./3=11.10" hare
i . m pt Air smoerety 1
hands nklng
' permit ma toidem threat.
-- Very mertfaUy roar obedift' t ler?,
,r
tt. ~. , ..
• • Bira. F. DrANLE, X. ~-e...•,,
emus -Sou Report.—.-The regalar 'monthly
meeting of the Directors of the Poor. of Schuyl
kill ,County, was held at. the 'Alnis4louse,
March 7th. Di7o. Present, M. W. Felix. Ftedk.
Beck and Francis McOurk.
The following ,is the census of the House for
the month ending Feb. 3t',1870: . •
No. of Inmates in the Hortse, Jan. 31, 1870 j- 135
" 'Feb. '28 ; 1870 - 338
Incittase last month - - 3
No: of Inmates in the House Feb.- , Bfl
- 372
4 ` to same time this year .- - .t
- Iteatrisae buttLyear - - - , - 34
Of the above are insane and idiotio; flu un
der medical treatment ; 46 children. _
Admitted. during the month,•24; discharged
and absconded, 10 .laound nut, 1; born, I; died, 5,
• Lodging and meads *ere , furnished to 244 per-
OULAoor relief waq granted to '• 53 families,
amounting to $385 25. ' -
Bills were read, and orders were drawn_
March 7, 1870, amounting to - - $ 3 ,0 3 S 01
Previous twine - • - - 4,327 46
Totil
•
.
" US:al Jottings . ---Colart convened on Monday
morning. • • •
Water wrjs let into the Osnal on Monday,
. Missionary AnuiverSari; of the Second Street
M.• E. Sunday School on Sunday last ,
A strike occurred among the Workmen of the
Port Clinton and Topton - Railroad last week:
James Ouldin, of Mount Carbon,,, had . tiro
fingers taken off Rat week between ;the bump
ers while colitilihg airs.
On •Friday morning of last week the .dead .
body'of Mrs. Devitte, an aged lady, was 'found
near her house at Lake Run. •
On Friday bight, 4th inst.,. two. watchman at
Eiatwick Colliery, Sharnokn4. were - attacked
by milieus, when one of them, named Bu
chanan, was killed and the other was shot
through the ear. •
Major Lev c Huber was presented with a
handsome pair of gold spectacles by, the choir
of 'the First Presbyterian Church On' Friday
,
evening of last week. , .
II
The porough Council! building, 'in Market
street; was sold to the Second PreMsyterian
congregation on last Monday night,fdr tSi(x).
;Mr.; DeCortiova lectured to a full' house at
Union Hall on Wednesday evening. ,
Hay sold for twenty one dollars rm - Monda3,-
in Centre street. • '
The railroad trains arriving here have been
initnensely crowded this week, '•
Olive Logan' will ) lecture in I,this Borough
;about the middle of April. •
R. F. Ditane,l3t. T. K., will lecture In Potts
ville on the 19th and 20th of•APril. • •
JOhn Hagen, an employetat the Pioneer
Furnace, lost an arm on Tuesday by having it,
caught-in the cog-wheels oftheMarhinery.
Music has been introduced into, the , Pottsville
High School. • ; - • •
• !Rai. J. N. Pugh, of Cres.sona4will preach in.
the Welsh Congregatioryd chard) of Pottsville
every alternate Sabbath- hereafter: '
'Spring *lll begin - on the 21st March. 1
'The snow has,nearly all disappeared fri - un our
- streets. •
On' Wednesday la‘it on Motion: of Rowell.
Pishen, Esq., Capt. C. NI. Brunim was aithitted
6. practice In the sevcral. murts of, Schuylklil
County,. •
• A prize !fight tOok plisO 'near BirdsborO', bn
the line Of the Reading . Railroad On Wednes
d-IY. • Coni;, of-the brutwatogrom tis County,;
" The+ first . denntders of this National Capita -7-
National Light.lnfantry and Washington Artii-,
lery—are „ lreque*ted 'to ',meet, at the Exehange
Hotel thi evening,. ;• '
eager Poiti :Co :* 203,0, A. • ll...•solsinusterod
on Tuesday at Pine Grove.
.; •
A formal openin of thq' Lebanon and Pine
'grove Railroad tool piano Mondily lest.
Income taxes are payable bn the tiro of MaY:l
'Ail returns should be made thfii mouth. •
The Borough School „ Bnird Wa4 without.' a
, . .
quorum' . • - . •
. L The Riport of, the 13, - )ard Belief Of 'Gowen
Post till Iry published soon in pamphlet form.
Tableaux of Erin will °Roo et Li mow Hall on
;Monday evenin l• . • • •
•
hamburg Kasen niacica telegraph stati .
A man was-bitten by q (IN.; lit etTryttv street on
Tilinidavie,ietitisg. •
of operators, an4l. miners and shir-
Pert' of coat,Will be held on next Tuesday. ' •
This is he tittle to trim watre.rines and frith
• trees. : •
Wendell Phillips leetured at rnion Rail last
.ei•eiting th s<crowdedhouse. • .
VOURT' PR 0cr4,0504.
. .
i
[REPORTED sx a trstvr. i.v PO Fi, II; E II A PO( 31 I 14813 S
, ..rotntrlA4, li V. Cii fit4"l4 PH ER 4,1171•L1C. 0....44. I
Joseph Roeder• was prosectited 'for selling
porter, ale and lager heer without license. • Jos.
Adam a btewer of Tamaqua, wale to
I e prosecu
tor. t was shown.that the . defendant W . ILS only.;
a hired man 'in AU , employ .of M oto,
brewer of Reading, and , inereliNdelivered the
goods in the original caskslo rinto'scristomers,
at Itiatiatioy City. and' 'vicinity, j The Reading
beer, it , appeared, was sold for 'less than
Adam sold his-;:which the defendant alleged
was the key-note of this prosecution. Verdict, -
not guilty, and the prosecutor tor costs. )
John T . MeAted was put on trial for killing
four' goats of, Peter Riley's at' Mount 'Carbon.'
The same patties Were before the 'Court at the
September ..4essiops last, the etplr difference
being that then it teas tote goat; , aewhich time,
the jury aequitted the defendant, and divided
the costs for; payment. The preseeutor had
never paid his-share, thaDistriet Attorney hat
ing taken a - role to ant aside that portion of the
verdict; and, this prosecution Seemed to bee.
short cut
,on the Add nuinYtt,part to'settle the
question. , yerdiot—riqt gitilty,:and the prose
cutor for ' i• '
Frederick Sinterwalt was charged with Main
taining a 'nuisance. He. runs a bone mill at
Rocktown, in Butler. Township, and collects
all sorts of dead animals and /eaves thorn to rot
on his premises. In Warm weather the stench
is unbearable to the wholenaighborhood. After
several witnesses" were heard;:t he ' - .defendant
withdrew his plea of not guilty and admitted
the charge; whereupon- the Court sentenced
him to pay a fine of .00 find the mite, awl' di
reeved. that the nuisance should be abated.
Hugh Orpy was prosecuted b y dames Wal
lace, on a charge of larceny. The defendant and
the prosecutor, with Arthur Wallace, Xpre all
three working together 'With horses and carte
for Daniel Frreller, beyond Minersville. 'At a
settlement in October last, Freiler handed to the
prosemtor and dofotplgrit together a package of
some $llO In moneyTheing the jeihtamount due
them. The prosecutor refused to take it,, say
ing he wanted/his own 'share;' separntely,z De-•
rendant then took np the money and put. it in
his pocket, proposing to go to their lawyer who
should make the proper division between them.
Somehow no such division was ever made, and
the defendant still holds All thetneney.. But
however dlsreputaAe his conduct for that, the
jurY, under the instructions of the Court, soon
made up their mindathere was no larceny: in
it, and,aceordingly rendered a verdict of acquit
tal. 'The costs WI on the county:- -
This concluding OA' 13i/sit:leas ready for
trial, the Court et poen diVharged all thej.iF
tors, and. adjourned fill IA) o'cloclt nett Monday
morning. One or titore homicide cases will be
taken up next week: . '
GRAND SrAVREPORT.
At SP o'clock the Grand...huy came into Court,
and by Mr. Jatnee li. B e ak, Roreman, sub
mitted their report; of which we make the fol
lowing synopsis:. ,
Bills acted on sB,'of which is were returned,
"true" and 10 ignored.
'Petition for the incorporation of. Girardville:
iztd Cillbertore into Boroughs, were:Considered
and fayorably reported on, -
The'ae+eral offiees were yisittui and found in
good condition, e x cept the vault floor in the ,
'Treasurer's Office, which• they recommend to
be laid in tiles. Certain sales-liooks same,
office are worn ant from long nae, and the fury
recommend ititmediate 'attention to - them for
the preservation of the iniportest redbirds they .
The prison i$ pronounced'ivell kept; brit en
tirely too small, 4 crossing it , treconimend6i,
between the Court Ifonso and jail,,
A flag-man, the jury . recommend} should usl
placed stt the railroad crossing of Centre street
near McKeown's. ~
The July conclitde with their thanks to the
-Court, District Attorney, &o. for the' assistaneir
furnished them In the discharge of their duties.-
tor ALL casso;jotirti and CO=Orolleoce addressed to .
this °Mee , and laten4h.d. Ibrpubl 0, most have the veal
-mum or rho, writer stratim--(not that we shall potdieb
but ibr our ltiOrruiallotL)—sad - be ifritten_ooobe Aldo of ate.
=Only. OthOrwite. they will to Into the weals-basing-
Jpoanaz. • , • • • ~
mtron ourßegtparcorresportdent.l - . • •
IrWATfig IN PlLlZADkuutr.a,
-
Rion or fi'Marzz—l.a.w run DiEss' Rion•
-AN OLD cirrrayttiot—iira Jtsy Pontaint
• WErir—yer Plsra.tioarr Pritsentmr-4 Usti
. ,
.CoattltQAL tthir--t.:Nryrresrm Coumascr
' I •
I,III.ADELPHIA, March 11,11.870.; •
So much is said about the rights of woman •
se many lawokre nada for her protectiou-thst
at the risk of incurring displeasure 'from the
fair sok, I kdftcate the amending of our laird
to protect the men fronallio Poser ar a (*ft*
clasecifarOtnen. -It has been mid that women::
lave 101 tbe their idde, • and indeed _in
looking overt e unpublished records o' our
Crib:Libel Court, and fa the printedloodeedlnta
thereat, -, ate- find • innuMemble cases* where"
wanner:4 by tite power the law gives theM,besot.
blasted th e character of many noble yonths;and
levied blackmail, in the attaPe of hash-m:11r
on'the timid irho preferred the payment sot a
large ast to the pnblicitv qf :cre of ratters
they •re Theta is a case in paisiti._
which Moja* been disposed - of bv Judge Pel
SOIL One &Oak Gore. *depraved wreit,i ltaa
been /hint re r a number or years papl, Won
money received trots menwitem she has threat%
ened to tom pralleged eriftell—the Mdie
threat them out of tberr ntotiv,
haeralat ,oatb a that wnman would fume bima ng theircein,; kike !timid operate
outlaw %mete serrant tit a family to(
Indium tanks there were' young 'Men and
then, - npmnerne e. montertt r Ay, letr,
=tati r eitort - money' ' bele MarlUdt,bease.,
httthrd- Itlentrabttiraearstii-:
"Irirs*ltt v vergew. - mivorluip
itilivr taw siany a Mr.:Wainer.* unaw
chant Ofstszlaing annempasidaisr A ystig-
;big bim witk , baying conunitto egitiny
=I
Mai
larch Tenn, See , : atif?inis
. .
FRIDAY, ?tiara' 11
.oarti.spanbcnct..
Upon her person, hi ',determined to, punish
her. his innocence, be takeectited , her
tat tiny. She was corivitted, and'yesterday
J' in Ali able charge!, seetencesther
la pay wage 150 - 0, coma or prolocntion, and
=c c .
egadergo, an impriscutatumt, in the State Pent
telithlo try l
' • volafiriemes4;, eththor - for
*mu ye so. l 4 r A just sentence ... - ,•` ,t . •.-
•il The page . excellence of oak- present police
Eiadwatt spin exemplified .wariur few nighti
n the arrest by oftkatr 'Mullin, st Bread and
as *eels, of a respectaWe hod,v• who
.atier. stireitin,3 this arrival of bet husband, who
is a cOaddetior on the lath and roth Street- Pia
asinicat. Beltway . The officer instated on taking
the lad y to the elation-house as a Oreatitute, arid
whim' she, knowing the falsity of the chows,
resisted, bet put hands p oilier' , her and
dragged herda tue station-bouse. , .:A. number,of .
peas wieueseal the outrage and , called, the
Mayor's solution to it. 'He a,greed to attend to
Mr.. Mullin, but tbs.: officeesull remains on the
force, and e aggriiried parties tinting that
the Mayor ilea& Dot more In 'thermatter. bare
brought a t eriurinal preseention: againA the
;policeman, Who has been bound sis - er toianswer
ettCoutt, with ex-Rixsirder Erten tut hall:
The "Wait Phi ' Iphia Chore Society, "t is
fast reaching the top, round in' , he ladder or
musical fame. At its concert in Übirm 11411,
last night, a crowd of krahlonable and delighted
people were gathered. The'tickets for .it - -vivre
at a premitrt,'selling for quite ati advance over
[ the regular price. The Concert sgas ar madrigal
one; the rbaest of its kind everlglvert in this
1 rit o tg;d consisted of selectiorts Prom s number
of kaof Arai class initsic t .ecithraoirtg 'seat
compoidtions sa "Land ofour louvers," "Awake
Sweet Unit" "Calm be thy Slumbers ," ittc.
These Mott were all given' without accompan
iment, an the effect was vervkfine indeed,
__ The , commencement of the University of
' Pennsylvania at the Academy of Musa- to-day,
'is largely attended, and tbe exercises inteest
ing. Many. M. Ws were protented with their
diplomas. ;The Valedictory was delivered by
- Prof. :71eldy. . • - '
Below
.tied" to-days guotatioris of ic o eks,
bonds, - gold And silver.: , _ '
'..,Drexel tt Co. quote ! ‘ • . ,
C. s. vs, its 1.... ~.... • • t ur I %i v 'ti
Old C. t,5..5--it,i55..."..--._ . .... --.. 4-...'- 11l-
New . net .. ; .. I, -__. nu Rim,
-1 Hay i,ia i5i;1:iii.i...i4.......:. 11o1‘to,11C3)
"1 Julyekud.lan'y, tea:- .... _ ItS %nis.
" , " July - and Jan'y, 1567 ~. . lOVI.;,4110
"' -. July audjJan`y, iris..; nu linti;
10-40 Boirla rer-1.10G,,,
G01d... —..'.-...—... .. .—...—............. 1 . 113 1 eat
Isterl4 Exchange., ' . - I'Ll (31='1 Pan —s Extbanae...... ........____.4.1.....--- 43s 4 , 445 r.
Sailer S Stever:men," Bankers and Brokers, No. 46
soma. Third Street, quote Stocks, Gold and Silver as
tO/loirs: •
;$7,365 50
--' • ' Hid. - Y' e 4.
'
Reading Rigroad 1.5%
• - T O , 57
Penns Tialtrowl: .. -- ..... ---, •,..,'• 4 ,
. c e. z
Lehigh ValteY - ' t - - '--,--------: rig ' - i :;,ill
Mtge .13:111 . -
- . .A) , .. 41
utue*baylkill ' 4 • --,--"""'
Catliwiltsa Com.- ire —.-------,-,- 14} ,16
' ' • „ Prete4l.----:„.,'--- ,
_.143-ri • ~ ;5-1
Reba!
1•1k.111 Nay. Common Stpck..:... 6
. Preferred 143 , ,
Gold Apena •
110 A. 11.;....._...113 '2
11 " ' 11.2 4 1 -T.
2 "
II P. ....117414 yto.sc.d .
.tiger. !Silver - .......111".1112 1 ' • ,
' 'FlAnutsnr*a, March 11; 1$:0.
-
Since oar c
last the qovertior has signed "the
folloWing bill
To, authorize the Board of School Directors
of the Independent Stepheris' l ,Stinol Distig e ,t,
the. Township of West 'Brunswick, to sell
public or private 'sale uponsuith". terms as they
raav deem, best, "that .certaiti• lots of ground •
and buildings situate in said. township,. and
which Was conveyed by . Diunet Graeff to Abra
ham; Seltzer and ethers, in trust, for the German
and , English school-house:" The proceeds of
the sale to be paid over to the. treasurer. of the
school district,' u? ice used a. , ‘. the directors shall
.
determine... ' . ' 4„ •
An Act to incorporate the Pennsylvania De- ,
posit ~ and 'lnsurance ,Company' of Schuylkill
Courity has been . vetoed .on Constitutional
grounds. .
Vets few bills have . lately:found their way
into. the hands of the Eiecutive,.and these.that
have are generally of a local nature. •
Senate bill vacating certaitrportions . of.;strect4
in , Bonawitz 5 addition to Pinegrove, has passed •
the:House; and awaits the Executive iiignature.:
The follniving Acts have passed the lionse„
Authorizing' the County, Cominissioner , to:
- receive the returniioUthe School' Tax Collector .
of East Union township ; for ISEIS, within sixt;i
daVs.. • • .
Creating a 'North ward in Potevville t talting in
Eisitittautilt and OA utipee part of -the . l_itirough:'
To;preserve timber lands froni.the ravages of
firer Thia Aettnalges it the duty of the, Corn
triiisioners of the several counties in the State to
appoint perisons;under oath,.• to -ferret! but , and
bring to puniedinattut all persons who wilfully
or Otherwise cause the burning, of timberlands,
:Indiomeasures take t,p haVei such fires*, extin-.
guished where it can be done, the expenses to
be paid Out of the county treasury—the unseated
land tux to be tirst applied td such expenses.
•
To. repeal an Act relative to Ahe payment of
taxes of tens:loA It t uds,. approved N0v:49,1869.
liaraefivoiked evident Injustice to the
public, having been gotten Up In favorOf Inter
estettpartles, Enid will he!wipecl, as it ought to
be, fromihti boOks. •', ; ' •
The Act supplementary. to an Act incorpo
rating the Borough of St. Clair extending 'the
limits of the . boroughy for: taxable pUrposes,
was - Objected off. The.tobjection, -we'.onder
stand, estrielrom . lifetherilleStste; •
; act: anthonzing efiripanitta• incorporated
wider the mininglaws of the Sta il te to levy and
collect assessinehts. upon stOck has been de-1
feated inthe House. • : . •
The act.relative to the publication of.local.
laws in the newspapers of the Counties of Cen—
tre and Schuylkill, which said laiv,so far as me
know, has never been'put In.forcein'the latter
' Cennty; hate-been repealed'So far the former:
County is concerned..s. s , . .
The followirigtiills nare,,beeri read in place in.:
• the 1101 1 -1 0 3 z .• -!.
Fdr the relief. of Washington ReifsnYtier
pav expen s e;; iecurred.during the late war: 1 ;y
'l'l)cltelid the time fur the settleateut
vie): Convilte'i4 tax duplicate one year. •
;11.elative.to the collection of taxes'ip S,;1111.•
Manheim ToWnship—to firm out the eottee
flon to the lowest bidder....!
Regulating the price of transportation oCeoal
and 'other freights. la a bill of; the nit - nest
Importanceiand is gotten pp in, the interests of
the NVorkingmen's Association, whose cot-unlit
tee will have done airreat Work if fitc. secure
its:passage, ' . .
The-following billsTernain on the Senate eel
.epdar, or. have passed that' body ;
TO ineorporate the General emfneil Othe Mi
ners and Laborers'. Benevolent' Agsociation •of
'the State of Bennaylvania;
.! Supplementary to an' act entitled "Auct to
hicorp , orate the: Ashlagd gas and Writer Cont
i,
approved the 4th oily of Mareh, ISts's;
Incorporating the_ lion Ifoulderis Interna
tional Co-operative ITnion
Extending an act giving a bonnty on fox
Scalps in Dauphin ccuntYtoSehuYlfilll County . ;
'And extending the time .for the payment of
enrolment taxfid the Pottsville Steel and Coal
Company.- . ,
Tlie 'Miners' Hospital
' . bill has net yet been.
put on its tinat,passage„ dark Inc ;; when I 3ay
that before two years' the miners of Schuylkill
I will be. well provided for'so far as...hospitals. are
'Oncerned, ,
Anumben of petitions from soldiers of your
County have been handed, through me to Air.„
Ellis,- - whose objee't is- the establiiiiment 0f.'..- - a
:house for Pennsylvania's' disabled soldier's,*
sailors and marines of the lite war, in aceord
' ance - with the recommendation of ells Excel:
:limey; the Governer :iri hiti last, message. So
far nothing has been done in the Matter, no one
seeming desirous of taking the initiative.
. this, little can be accompi Wiled unless there is
4 bold, determined, and •persistant effort made
on the part of the soldierstbrougliont the State,
acting in concert: I
A move is,bn root to .dismembei
County by, cutting on" Pinegrtive .tewnship ans ,
annexing it to Lebanon countV.
Who are at the bottom or die movement we
do noel:now. • A committee we - understand, has.
Waited oriltr.' Derringer, tile member from Leh:
'anon, who, not knowing what to do, has solicit
ed the opinlo4_9f the Hon. Congressman -from
the distkict.; The•Jillt of dismetritierment has
been drawn tap-lit least by rumor—and only
waits a 1 Ditvprable opportunity to show itsilif in
the Rouse. " ' i‘ •
The fight over the new judge bill still 'non-
Ainuee., 'What will be the result- Gnmipotatice,
only can tell, yet:we can hazard'an
_ppinietrt4
;ounselres. - The brittle is riot tothe Strongalone,..
but to the vigilant, the active, and the Wive.
An Act ; baa been intioduced int6 , the Senate
for. tha preservation of-the records of the In
spectors of mines In the mining districts of
Schuylkill and Luzerne, embracing the antbra- -
cite tad regforts,of the State. • ,
The , affairs or the Legislature are somewha t mixed,- and httis a wise man whO attempts to
,
unravel , •
P'Onnsylvaniaj Railroad runs the estab-•
lishOent'lo II Ivory considerable extent in ite
ownrintereit4 rind without it nothing is done
tbatSs done., t Sencrustr..t..
r
iy- ~. ' .... '
-:'t: Al , -I , r:* 'fierXtnPf
. 4 1-.-:-' :t
, scitthri.zzi e. ,t , Elk__ TA , t--hipth .10, BM, '
-11nrines DAIL* ,1 , a, - arRICA.L . 7 3.
- Ther-rrown • not 1. i -,. .
rbsgn ratc
Aisivilo, still,
- kly p 't • The - Vorprantora elect
At tbelast, beld on
:At o' :,elkoming of ... : Cast.,:. subscription
-book .
ntaite apeoldPunl-tinuunotrinof $7,000 in
-stock still'sititte,
. - Inta at' oncesubseribed.
tnr.the life -'-elaini repnwinted. Since that
time tHelainunt bait .ftn increased to $12,000
.bif individual enbowl , pilots. It will thee. be
an t !tug 0
. resept pavans of the ultimate sue
cella or the rooVolooril ere %ert elloooratting.
The amounts subscribed up to this time, aside
- from the-Society hinds, base been ;principally
eaten by the younger pot:thin of bur oommu
zdty, clink* and.mec ha nics Could.- but our
older merchants beinduced to. take as =deb
interest in the matter as the younger people,
'the -requisite amount could be raised iii a
Week** time: - Singular it is that so ne people.
^ who hive accumulated "In Inereatalle tra ffi c
With the :citizens ef this'lloroUgh, should be the
last to enconrage
pr must acknowledge
Will be ta gr , t hoc ' went and benefit to the
citizens - sa d at huge taselves-partidularly. • -
The lutetium:llo. di not having a concert hall
here was severely! Veit an last Saturday,' eve
fling, -..ith inn.; the occasion of Prof. Aterzandee 8
Pima Soiree,: Thos
aA entertainment VII 3 held in
one of therxmas of; the Primary department of
the. Dublin wheel Wilding, the =4 available
math fbr• sacks poi .o thn mold, or stn be
obtained lii MP. to. 1 111 j. Imagine several troadrea
.ns crownets 1104 this roots;; in - size Etex4o
with: 6E6 f r spnd* e c i rit of age, he tru en me ded id f° ea r
• ben:a:ll644,ot : cornihrtable Ipositions of
torstsof.nitusiel, tortsi lecre,irtitrig tolsacri=
their comforts of easotoattelid the excellent
• afforded thent by Prof. Alexander and his
i l at
p pllC — Aist - in Aida' connection,- w-few-vrOrds
r OnlieerPhigtheentertitinuyentitilliwitbiktuies.
rreit - A1
t tr:iti tu ritA' the "flarnfornianee, Wes as
, pienirt_.by el . lily latirripila -Da, tone Gal
iandiend ' .ef roureiile t . and \v . , A.' licasci
m 4 Is*, Cam of *le place: • The excellent pro-....
granulite maimed consisted of eighteen pieces;
ponsPrlsing, aelok,- ballng d vtica' I dudes'
111 41 10 1111Pelb4 OIL. 7/itt, gu le throdaboat'
entire, Pe wris.44o. tegiti iberOsehlie
' - , / YrYVV4 III . 4 #Plre.Per l oilt we:Weald be
d ou t
:42W ',wens. 'U. : AV* ilta.lart'v
wri goona
waraion , datightedini to endure_'
10 2
' 1664 **P. ' Od ' -on on malt Witches
, ilipm lig- '•friiiesirind,a bialf,li
•tjtat Pfendtbredlnu t ,l
~ e itstr. ig unm:eiggithi
Reinke ` sal i 0002 : and kindly rionionded. J
- I*P U ratiliktioi , :1111 4_ 1 "4 141
ENNSYLVJLNIA.
HARROD !We;
OM
brilliant reels on, the violin, accompanied by the
Professor, on the •piano. Too much credit can...
not lisit awarded to Prof. Alexmader for his for
titude anikpadence developing the musical
talent orouryonbtrolks. , •
Jphn C. EVdand. formerly conductor or
the; Mine 11111 passenger train, Ortrving in that
peslUon five 3vars, re s igned ou the tet Scl
take another. stiaistion tin the North Central
Railroad. •thirifilrtho discharge of his duthei
on the Nine hilt road Mr. Eveland gained
many friends, all of whom sincerely regret his
'departure, and wish himell success in his new
field of tai hrr. K. Heilman is his. Nue
eessor. and an experienced railroad Man ; having
been connected with thitliine Hill road far a
number of years as freight and ticket wit.; at
Crefk.4. -
Preparations for the musical eMertaittment
'and lecture to be held inSt. • Ambrose . Catholic
Chnreh on St. Patrick's Day, are . almost coin
, The ro-gedicatoryeereminties In the Lutheran.
Churel will take, glare on the '27th. A oumber,
:of ministers from abroad will be in attendance , .
- • Etty Lr...
•
,:
Dirt.PDW. METZ . ...4rlk,'D lns VVSTIte-
~
brolight, by • our. Borough tiy -the
above derde-num has already found its custout
er, and Geo'. Pomeroy,. Esq., is now, the f, L . T ri.
nate possessor. Fortune,.•Weed, it 'may. be
••alledto come in possession ofa really good
• itruntent, for pianos are like women, "plenty
.ntimber, but few tgoed ones." -
.i•-•It is not ihe case, however costly it may be,
which gives the harmony,. but the -interior ar
rangement, and in that. regard Prof, Iletz's in
struments are unsurpassed In both hemispheres.-
- lir. Franz Liszt, the grcotest pianist now Hy
ing, and Prof. Toepper, theritiventorot riumer 7 ,
ons improvements on organ building, and Iglu
self a great performer on that most difficult hi
strnment, agree that. Iletz's pianos are net alone
superior to ail otherS, hid justly eelebratedthem
for their private aiii[public use. Lit; Who re
commends these pianos to all his friends in and
out of Rome, testities in several autographic
-ters to that erfect and t. consequence of the
;great fame which theSe -Instruments gaitied.in
Europe, Betz was indnred, in 1364, by the firm
of Steinway, in sew -York, tejoin them in their
experiment ofpiano building.
The spirit of Independence; however,- did -not
allow a man like Metz to remain • in a socatid-:
glast nosition. Hers a go-a-head man, and tried'
'to find his his.rAvn way, in which he sueceed
better than many expected. < : •
In a few days, we are told, Hetz will arrive
with , L some new instruments, one amongst them
round cornercil;: with Agraffe attachment. an
imported - methanisni.
-
lie will 'undoubtedly 'give an exhibition Of,
his exquisite masterpiece, and - the well known
virtuosity 'of the Piano King. as he ir:rs termed
in the old country, wilt ;.five at once not onlyra
treat to taw : de-loving people ; but also a • chalice.
for :judging the meritsof said instrunient.
IV,o will notify, our readers-in time 'when* the
great day arrives, and feel ware td- deserve : the
thanks' of the public therefore. ;•• "- :
J..
11:1 1 A .
114
k AL L Y
. ,
TIIE-eNOTITHERN PACIFIC AND . THE CEIOTEAL
lOWA lIAII,IIOADS.--:-GTOUId hag been brbkeu,
withepPropriate ceremonies, at. Duhitti, Lake
Superior, upon the Northern Pacirie Railroad,
the new continental line which is to extend from
that 'city to Puget's S' , fluud .oport the Pacific.
The construction of link ioad, with the efimple-,
3i4,:tn or the Lake Superior and :Mississippi River .
-Railroad Ito be finished, from St. Paul to Ti-
ItitlV July next.). and the building of three
liriere.importent lines from Si.' Paul to the dif
ferent sections of Minnesota, will make'of the
latter city ti grent radroad centre, and the central
Railroad of lowa will be the. most direct route.
to the Sduth and Southwest, the: distance from •
Duluth,aud St: Paul 'to St. Louts by this line
Ibeing 137 riffles shorter than - by. any eXisiing
route. .Since these bonds were first offered in.
November last, they haVe been taken to. the
amount of 'more. than one million dollar._ As
less than three millions (remain to. be •disposed
of, and as the nowregencies we haVe named are
stimulating the demand, the entire issue (limi
ted to $lB,OOO per mile) is likely to be closed Out
at an early day. The soundness of judgrire'nt
of 'Afssra: Jay Cooke & Co. in all matters of in--.
vestment: is universally - acknowledged.' They."
so carefully' examine into - the ' merits :of any
security before recommending it to their ces
torners. that their 'strong endorsement .fir these
bonds, in ,another eoltuun, will carry, great
weight: i• •
gocal Nusitiess Mikes.
".Scents a line first insertion: cents-n - line each "nib,*
quenl insertion. .
NEW Pii.TTEEIS.S just recelN'ed: at the Cloak. and
Trimming Store; t 'entre street. below American
House. Pottsville. . 11-t f • NIAGQIE BOLAND.
87:3riNDElzs SILK Susri:NnEits!!
, VxviA:4-COLLARS! COLLARS!!' •
BAL:SIP.ICLV..S IiALF
PAPER. COL LARS PER CoLtAtts !. • . •
SiTOCK-4!!. • .•
• ,•. • • ••
Feb, P, '7e.-24,t7J .AtD. A. SSIITIT'S, P9ttsxille.
ONLY ':AI CerltS tor a superior Oyster SteNr - at • Pott 0
Ladles and bunt. ite, ta,urafit, No, WI Centre straet.
Prt..... - -s reduc.Nl to Stift the ti.w.e.' t.:qll and see .for
yoursOves. ~ .. • . ~3 .4e*
.
. .
FRENCH, F.l'liglihrt and Atii.erican efottis t all 'styleFi
awl of t tiaP3t qt)alitl4s, ;it 1). A. Sul! t Centre-S“
'FRENCH PADDED LINE' DRILLS, a 'belintlful iirttz
ele D. A. - Smith's, Centre Street..
2.0 cents a line firs,C.AnArtionl each suhgequcnt'in,crilaa
cents a line. 5 - '
A CLEILGYNLAN ;;Criting to a friend utcs, "Nly
vb.Yage to Ettrape Itostbknetl. I have:
,lbsenveEA ti.e fontitaln of health on this side trtrni
,AllarnAt. Three bottles of the Peruvian SYrtIP lutve
resetog stn Irma the fatur , , of the fiend
I.),Vp!,:bt to; should drink front thti !taint:On. ••• •
TnE tLIEY SmtySts Ct.rn, of New Xtirk,`reeent/Y
'ebAniten their:discussions from woman's stillratte to
Bate Prepqrations and l'imple•Banishers: They Ile-
eta:red that siliere nature had lifit endon - cd them'
With beAuty, It Was their right— - ea, 'their •duty—tti •
.=silt it where they could. ian they all. sated that
Magnolia Balm ovelennte Sallowtoss: ittaitth Skim
and Itirigruarks,[and g).*a to the complexion a most..
m IS
disriat. orosianl and appearantsv•
Wantonly to rnen,.no doithtl) anti that L,von's-Rt}.
thattnn lOtle'ttle Flair grott - thick, soft. and awful
pretty, am% moreover pre veittedd [trent turttiha gray.
If the proprietors of these articles did bet scliddtie
sisters an itlVOilie, they are net sniart. „nfit.
,
HOW WILLSON to sell n
ellen p rt.s they doi we don't know: W Couldn't, do It
our' ewes If we were to try.
• Alld so IVO and all' our etintinnall.r 'do:1
throng to .Roekblll whenever we t:9 that .'
sv^s and harill.V.anyhe.l37 considers: a .tri pto the ett
tully_aceottplkied, unless a suit from the Great-
EtroWn Halt is st part ex the purchases. . •
iimosn all the attmetionsandinduceraerit . Idly,
offered by other and newer clot litrig houses in Phil o,
delphia we not t hat. the c,id witabliSh mem eoneern
of IfockhilL4 A.VilisOn hot only. holds its own, Mil
izeeps'pace .irith all the modern improvements,:ap-..
tumty takir the lead in ritst of therm Their "tireat
Brown Hal #" is stocked from baainctit. to roof, with
everything,. hat can be,called for, In ineit's and boy's
wear. Pit re hasing . their materials, as tbeysio, Mims
mense, quantities, and hating the entire prodtierht
whole Mills on certain classes of goods, their facill
fortfurnishing their patrons with superior fa
brics tire unsurpassed. There is no house'
detphinor any other city,which has such complete
arranstments for making up Itsgocids, and trimming
them in the most esau hut° style. Both in the '3'0 , 4
made" and "custom departments, hosts at our read
ers can testify that Roelailli k Wilson never faH
give them entire satifffacttOlk.
IN, Cincinnati It ha:4 plat bec:nilecidc:d that a Worki
hn has a perfect right to wear men's clot hes,,as Much'
.as she pleases. There is no need - for any , such legal
'decision as that, anywhere about bere,lor FtOcXit
WrzsciNfrilae masentine garments, so delightful
ly adapted to the men,. that the ladies,thsread of
wanting. to wear them ! themselves ertc,inraga Elle
rum-folks to buy them'.
. ' And 4111.01'e best,
_re eu• high 00 hereatinuiS gyro e -
teeineti vtguaukilud proportibri as they buy or
&mit titly their thing.% of Roc - tuna 4k/WiLsoit.
' WOULD you hare Continual cheetialn%%s and hap
piness on your wife'
_a countinauce? Would you lutye
your home Irradiated Nrit h those betunt ofjoy which
can come only m fro the 71 gotten up Mile of lore- ,
ly wom4n in het' best est et 4 ?L 2; '? ,'''.
. Then you.inust be coast erateof the good wOmtmli
comfort, And you 'mustn't depend On her for the
making of ail the little boys' clothes: - When- You-
Can buy clothes for the little feilowsVos good, trs
beautiful, and as cheap, WS ROckartit. 4 ,Witso): -
make them, It is a sin A. inflict that mach toll on'
your wife:- . ' .
4 04.
~ Our.readers will( o well to take thelrjuiertiles with
them when they go. to Philaderribla to 'tray their
m
clothes,. swe it .'all the
,hest. looking ot them'
'do ? ) at itocstmt,..t. I v.:144% - N. • , .: • -
• ,
•
CHERRY PECTORAVPROLIII - *3, -.
. • •
For Cold, Caaglis, -Sore Threat, all Elrogehltlr, *.
-None f 0 enocl, None v , Pleasant, None Cure a$ Qnisk.
ittla.RTON LE GO., 10 Mica- Plonae, New York:
no more of "throe hatrlble tel nauSeeting
" BROWN CIIBEB YEffNGS:' • Nov.o, 'O9-46-4.;m•
, % COUGH, COLD. OR SORE THROAT RE.:
.4 - 1 quires • linmediatie 'attention, as
neglect often results in an Incurable
tang Disease. - 1211•OWN:B ItIICYNCIII-. • •
.AL TROCIIE win incest Invariably 1 . 3 K0N 1 - 0
Rice instant relief, F / or Bnorreniirs,-
ASTEMA, CATA CONW3IPTIVE and , t/C"
THROAT DISEASES, they have a soothing en , •
fiENGERS and PUBLIC fiI'EAORB
clear and htrengthenlbe . eolce, > • . • ,
Cistqcog to the'good reputation and point iarity ot,tho
TrOch, many worthless and cheap imitations, aro:V . -.
fered which are good for noting Be sure..to.osTipit
the true „
pttow.•?‘
• SOLD EvErerwitErts, . ,
Nov. 6, *Gst—f.;-(44
DHOENTX PECTORAL .—More than a million
- .L of Bottles of this Cough Medicine hate been . sold
in liveyears, and thoUsanda have beet' cured. Lz It
/Med° acoolnfillY/rill any uftlinary , cold an' 'the
dl • cough of wmutuptios haveislike yielded
to it. It is of greatest value to the eorcinitinity
and no tumby should be without it. It is pleasant
to the taste. 'lt is prepared by Dr: LEVI:OBER:
HOLTZER c of Philadelphian, And is , sold :by , Dr.
ROBINSON, and Mrs. SAYLOR, ;Druggists; Potts
ville, and by nearly. et ery Druggna and. Storekeeper ,
nt2Stienti a bottle. Deg_ , 09-49.47 14 Tr
.'.
TIEA.FICESB. ELINDN?BI3 '• CAT
/...g treated with success by . ISAACS. M. D..
of Diseases of Eye and Ear, (his specialiy)‘, in the
31edik=1 College of PaXttreiveyears experience' (for
merly of Ludo's, ifolland,) No; 666 A.rcli him,
Testiraynials at his oface.*, The Medical Ittertlty are
invited to accompany their patients. Artificial eyes
inserted without pain. Extuuicuition tme.-
July 31 .' 65--2b - 9m • . - • • '
.
E 13NrN AND ITS -DAarttEßB.—tile
Thuman %chiefly composed of tissues and
fibresstamens five to every change In ,the- condithm
of the auriosphste as the most delicate electrometer,
or the quicksilver in a barometer tube. - -
• The atomised, the Skin, the nerves, the 'lunge, and
the excretory Organ* are especially liable to be af
fected * by - these variations; and the best 'defence
against tlier disastrous tendency is - to keep the di- -
gestive machinery, which feeds and nourisbes the -
whole system, In good working order, .. •
If the stomach is weak or disordered .neither the
blood north, bile can be In a healthy state, and upon
the fitness of these twOlmpertant fluids for the 0112-
cesesslgned to them by nature, and the regularity..
or_t_hoir rterir, heart" bra great raeskarre.deperida;
wino 'Meals% heavily laden With chilling Vapbrs.
as it often is at this season of the year, the ditteStiOn•
should be an object of peculiar care.. If It is Weak
and languid. the whole physical structure will be
egereimid; • 'lf it is vigmons, therentireoranisatkus
-will be to resin the aritorrard and depressing
inane of a (limp and Vitiated atmoinhere, _ .
Apure angrz t zfe tonic is thegefore tepee-tally
needed-MX littinattbsC•M•minost com
p:mange karligg. and Ortettes'elitcumktlitterlis
vis e
been Mcwf- Ittileionlevand!poteng madqto of
the.at t kaarra,4 cot:Neat it laloartien ,
likast .4 at rlitis —.metal oleo , Ir. *he atm
'4lektlln tli " "nl4lOll etiel,iheUver
And Ixo: wets regulated; thers mbraced the . •• • , , puatilletate of AIM are trieWllnifttlie
• .._•., Ittilch - linPertadoCelt intertitit tendremit- -
'' Ac* ,„l / 4 1.be n i nt la rinisniMillsdebilltTaleildirehe,
• • . • .• • la Ap4oth.etearaikilk
of are liPt.
- ' • IrtlVS=Wlled enalinlieltilled itatins.
+1 'VI ilsee kt"ali V "lllei lytspr i°tlt'. t reel t da t i t o
•kir....„; =0,...-,
.....- - ...,,,,...y ,z.- t-_,, ..• , .--,, •-•, -••-• •• • • 1-47. •
fientratitoticrs., *• • -
MAACK 1870,,
rtAcoNtNsemoNa•or AN isvAtm.
buthed for the beneAt of Notrivca XEN and
°diem who salter from Nervous Debility, :etc., imp.
plying tbe mean* of self-core. .ItVrltten by ono tvhn
clued himaelf; and'aent free on receiving a, pelt 3
dinmted envelope: : Andreae
t • NATHANIEL MAYFAIR;
Brooklyn T;
.
LO4.IIOWA..Dz ESSENCE ofJAMAICA
AU:COES. Ls of double strength. and the only
pure •Esraenzo . a
.Jamaica Ginger In the , 'tnarkrt
'trieref tw.t.ht. only anacle to be relied On in•eas
tllc,Cholera Nortitai. DLarrticea, Dysinnery,
sestion., the eree tr: of 'Citange.of Water, Colds, ae.
Asfi fOr NollotWay'll'and take {to other. A hall tea.;
rimy- of It Is SOtr e tlP3 l r t"tl i l sla W n e n:l 4. sto lt ;e s kt. ' ept n . tu rs.l
iwty renta per , hht tie. Johnson. HollowayS, ono
don, kr! Arch Street, Philadelphia. •
. Curt Dirs_Nr , Chf . FO IforaPsca VS. VE.c.larydr.'
-, , . . CorfrEcrtoss, ~.,
They are scdelichrus. The doctors and mothers say
they are itteinostsAre an'd.errectual rethedy for those
peat.; of WORMS. The Ft name have the signatbre%
of the proprietors, on the wrapper of emelt box.
Twenty-Ow. eenb per box. *.l9.bason, liolloyfaS &
C9trit,t:n.or . ..!.."..reh'Sr., phlta, • "June 4, 'Ol , ---WAytt .
MardaSes•
• ELS.:4l..Elt—NlAirfiS'.---4.)n ' the lixortflug nt .ttv.
1011.111-V.*. at the rsitteti4le of the In - Wes Inother, • by
MeCtx)l, Mr, I IIANCI - 3 Et,,
Lro, .A 4 7.4.lltratikee W.laCtarattn. Vitt ML SALLIE.
;itttghtertsf the Idle-John S..C. Martlp. • ,
Aszidand lie.; on the ‘,.
JaltmAry, ti::thie Rev. D.. Z. v iieutbet. Ntr. T. A
.PF,G.i.F.V of Branilonvltle, PA., to •1111.-i3 KATE Kline
earmoi. -
• -
`the 4.lth nit.. by tli.-
Itetv. Wm. Stamm. Tit 074 , 101 tlittFVtirn to A NN
law( t. 3, both of st. Clair.. .: •
. 110,11. N ezk..
lab of Feb: by the Ijer. D. 7.: Kett
itoirs•Aertri.: to Wigs
Butler,Township, Ss'ehuylkth .1-ount!:.
1.15TER31.3.N--‘3lA.i - P3.i.-111
the 17th of Feb. haTe, the•lter. D. Z.
Lo t.7124 . 0•5T:K R MAIN of Aathlipid, Pa.: to SINs V.k
Mk . VEN. sir Locus tilale, Pa. •
• ki-RA.IIP-11.001.P.R.--On Saturday. :gar eh
thlk Priinittle Met he.itat Church, St. Clair. by I
Harwell, att. A 3IIIAILAx SITAR P. of St..
tb Mrs: 31.1.111 A lloot.t.h, of 31ount.Lahree.
Wr.crog E—:EVANi3:—'Sfarch A, USW, at Potts%
Paz., by• Rev: r. RUDA:AT NI IC9YIMBEI9 NA},
F.VA.3iS; tiOttil Of St.: Clut.r. • . . • ' - •
licatio.
/10,LtiEMAN---Thr the I.lth ult., in Hmtna rnwir:
Ahip, RAIN . tiOLDEMA. 4 "..;, an old anti highly eittem,i
citizen cif thisaCeti!tty, 96 , 63 -, , ..11 :retire.. I S 4 -
. .
....,
- KLINE---Oeithe .1714 utt:, in, Itubley te11.,11.7p:
CA:Rot:EKE K KIN 1:, 3 u the 3+3t It Tear or her age. .
~ •
, . .
. ,
... ,
EATIIROp—Ntii. s.'..t RAIL L , .Tti ttor, of Moupd City',
- Linn Coint t y,'Xiitisa.s, youngest daughter df,tlie tat.
Jolla Dreher. of Oral gsbil I g:
•
.
•
NIASiI.N.—On the' 'nit iiit.. :klAxil. NEI', infar,:
daughter of Samuel W. and Sallie 'Mason, ;aged 1
tuotiths:, 4 • . ." • • .
' .rtAti".:-:t0In the lOtti itt.t.; . v.cry suddenly, at Ot-•
iriwitam .Niitli. m...xy 41.tHs. NV WOW Or the ]lace ,4,.
•ltatiti,F;ig., aged 79-yea rs. Her interund - will tal
ptacp at . Orwigsburg,
..to , merrow, ~Sunolay)•afteru
ooti, at I oklimit. -- • - • . , • ,-• ' -
,ISTEPHEN'A—in:_qhlol.eport. Feb.
.rpt.y..4 TEP . IIF.Y.fS, ftged . #l yr-.3rs.
'7:Tor Salt' Atib itti'.,tiit;
U •
OICRENT.—A 'Room, tfilyd floor in Seitz' Build
lug, Centret'ortsville. Apply 1A
Jan 29 ; 1 70-sdl: A. J,. MEDLAR, .Nittrharit's HOtc.l
F . °4 - SALE-406.000' eubserib:.:
-- Ming et Mint:erg, Berka Co.. having on haw
WOO Brick offers them for saltat reduced priete,-
Applk - to JOHN TOI4LIy. March
IRDS'FOR-tiA.LE:—A large stock of Can/kr3:
8.10
ld - Fineries, Linnets and' all kludo of slngin,
Iltr '.4--till linported and glinranteed to be good sing-.
ers , GEO:• WEIDEItIIt..)LD, n-13 ~.Ntarket Stit,t.
,f.ot ville. .. : —-. . March 5, '70,-10-liait...
170 R: BALD.-43-rnew, and 4 old .Rlopc! Wagoik
. Dirt . Ourn veer Water Wagon:. all !wavily
trance!, to %nit io-inclr track.
GEORGE W. SN'i
Jan 1:„139-1- 'Votblylllo,
Fc'R
13411.13. E.—A Five Ton Ixxxkinotive,
for 4-frakt guatte: it*ut. been u4e4i for con
vnviin.;.coatnnttcont inn at the mint"... and nn<o.l
order. Apiny , to - GEO AV ' 4 `4l7.l)Fat,,YottKvine.
Jan 1 - • '
.
.
rOR BALE.„A .two-story. stone tlivelline
and' lot or ground, situated Market streo.
Pottsville, the 44. A. being te feet frUnt by feet Ir.
.depth, The terms are-masonalile. Any infortuatioi,
given by applying to .IStl. F, 3fo:*.Cis,-Pot„tsv
Jan 15, '794 1 ,Yr0] 0r.11.-so.ll3l.4TTLE,"Mairanqyeitl.
OR 8.A.L.E.-13reaker ill/W.F.riginv, Slope Biwa.',
-Alandline, Boilers; Otlice, Slt ps.StaelL,fic Sc
lately 'ooLllpiett by the Priturr,.se and 'Pesch. Oreburl
Coal Co., at st.Tialk. Will be i.old .-..114,d,y• to
• . •
15 • HENRY C. P.l.:tpiEL, It ldahantongo st .
Jau ;iv T 3-4(
Lsatt 11EN .-:--Tsro exitl. - S.>, in I tosveri? °like Rof
• rug corner -.'econd and lialiantonzn
Poirieaslinv April lid, • Apply. to HENRY C. RUS
*,EL, Real /Mate Agent, Alaliaiitongo Street.:
. • „Nitkr i 3 if
171IATErLLING HOtragß FOR SALE':
JLl.,:tiitoty-I.ltii4C , ,MahantongoStrtet.
25; Mtgrs .-. - " • • • . •
" • • 2 tatee-story brick. dwelling& ;in
tiipl3." to'lt. c, gent. 4
7,1 lantoii,v,Street. Jan. t,'os-----1-ft
Fir, Ton' I !,ii.....‘oznot stlit3.!l
for. 4-toot gauze rohd. MIS !Well Ailed Air °wive!.
pig coal and coal dirt ntthe bill:mg.:and-14 in good (...1
der: apply to. • TGEO. W. SNYD.hat. rattsxdle
JanuAry . 1,'70' • !. .
VOR LEASE. - -The voluabl6 tract. of Coal Lan
known ai Bolito &Wineljresier Tract, latii - Xll
lant.-situatc4 In Blytlse and f.iehuillall 'reavuilatp,
did containing about :110 acres ,{; offered for lei,:
.
pon reasonable terroi. Apply' till
V—
ta
- _pottsville or Po Carbpa.
Fetr 27, 'GS: tt
- .
MIL SAL/D.—Timber leave of W,t o iabies otwood
J.' laud,' in; Lebanon Ctionts, R mile* moult; 0.;
Plitegrove, aloug.the llue - ot the Letatinoalaud Pine
gfevu Railroad. Tie timber Is krinelpallg oal. Al
lia.Y.to MASON IrtarklitA.N ~Pottavllle. Pa.
or to W., 1014.R1S WE1D31.1, - (,Tialon Forge e. ,
.July . -Lebanon, Co.
FOB LEAWErA Valuable lease .ori the MAM-
JiQT/1„ 11.tilittOSE.: and BKILIMOfit.: VELNS:'
with a itun-ot one mile tn
pitting st: :Slcholas.Colllery..kualy. to -
ifiNA 1i
CA Fatf , ll
• - treat F.state.Agcut„Silye4 'rerram rcil-sv 111
: Oct. 'O, :1,14-44t t" . .
. .
nESDIABLE; 11E4ID.Tiyet - - rgit
subscriber 51:fers v. Ii! his thitible 2, - -sbny
brick dire/ling, earnef•r49th torertuu
TA , : at , lv v ri,ts RV:Relied li:i . rterts; are liticier line en I •
ti vat inn and weillsruckeduith fruit trees;shrubber y .
For 'tern:lS: and rum tkar information, apply t.;
ItCSSEL, o'Maha.nton t.
6 , F1,11 12, % . . • . - g
VHF A.OULTSCERY :POE SALE.—Ong 00 horse en
.ol glge,. ppnip; shaft and greirtse; one 50 hot,:
Arum, purftp, shaft rtnti I, g - tilt - ink; one
~ .hotse engine, 2 boilers, 10 ftt fold' slack; one
pole pump, :tad ymr44 11 In.' eo/llttaw.
;efitht I)otters, as ft;el by 31 locitcs; lot of-Ice p t>.
i. Apply to . 1..31.011.c4AN S (0., New Yltflaalelpttlx
` Ft S; - 1.4 '7O-0-M* or by letter to Por‘Va,rhou.
VALIIABLE COLLIERY MACHINERY,;
aI LTLE.Si WAGONS, RAILD.OAD..kIiGN, dec., dec.,
'FOR SA LE.-1 new Steam Pum.p and Pipes: 1 Buil.
. E ngine; 1 Pltllllll and P 4 I)6' 1: 1. Hoisting Eng . ine,
Drum rmd 13reakqr Engine, BiAlors an.'
liackine.l7 z' twilvd)fules: lot. of Wagons, Itutk
toobz, it.c.,.ke„ lately uae.:l at Silver Creek. ..1411.dy
RE . II.R.NIA.NN, Mi44lr.nort,
Feco- 1 ,: - 4
E" On L EAS E - 4 4 :11i/OW4TURA.T.- PARK
.1.% AND .HOTEL .—The.- failwer ,
the Schuylkill Couuty Park Arloelatton will reeelvo
proposals tor ivFive Years'. Lease ot,the Vlot,el awl
Park, , i egts vayable quarterly in advance. Po-,es
eloB gii ! 'en on the. l*t day of'Aptil 4 ,l6:o.
- • L. WO3I.ESWER, rrest
,
F. P. „hi F:RCHER
Feb 5,774 • I
M - rgit • •
„Vho . follOwing',l4till on hand at theiuncarteollic•rv•
,;••'One pumping', - engine, sixty by power. Wens'
hut' an the machinery connected with - 'the, 80b,,1 •
• -
One hoisting engine sixts hOrse, with all the sn't•
ebinerT connected with` hoisting.
51. x .bollers used, for'purnuing susfhoisting.
• feet bY:thirtY'reur inches In dituneter, with all, [l,,
connections. •
One' fait, ten' feet dittinetei, :16.deelt. Paddle. i' , . -
gether -with engine, twenty-five horse, and-two b
en eighteen feet by thirty- intthes• diameter, N. 114
their connections all compiete. .
One steam pump 7-inch (Allison & Bannan Mak
satisfactory - article.
- The above machinery is In good condition. at.
.will. be told reasondbly. s •.; -
•
also. cold water`penw and pipes'? a&ilns
•and 36-Inch Mire: . Sins. Trusillng.B s,
the' buildings nalcbAell inaellinerT•Nizaa, In. •
Also, horses, - ntles, wagons, etc. •
• Yor farther information. inquire at 'the - office,
East. Market st.„ or at the Inman. Colltecv.,
Jan 7, 'O9,,ICVS.tf JOJEIN Rani.
• W ' SHE/LIMB, OR 0 -
• • • • ' ortvtats
• / ; FITE' COAL LEA§ES. ,• • •
. .
•
Tito "leases at ,fle/fensfeht ;on inuiduour
water. level.. • • , •
. thie,Red Ash•eaSt of Llewellyn: A. t
One Red Ash Lease on the ect, this k
• A Ltm.se on 3huncooth,- Skidmore and F Zntroi
Milt Creek. • . •
• Triarn, LANDS FOR SALE. '
FaO aerate splendid White Oak Timber. Land, si •
ble for cai- stuff, eke.
1500 acres Timber Land in Patter County'. • -
l() acme yellow pine for flooring,
5 • -
10O00naueres C cresiind
g. tim Prop t be imber r land- . •
heatin.' • . . • •
..•• 500 acres"good Red" Shale Farming land, berw •1•n
Barnesville and the Tunnel, Cut into lots to su'i pur
_
A .honse rand lot
..on MahantOngo stree GO= fc
ft01:14.
5 Dwelling Rouses and Int. at,SPencerville. •
• A good dwelling and store house forsale at Gi►ixr.
near font eollieries. • • •-
•
• A:l°ton Sanderson street, lat feebfront-by fem.
deep. with 2stqry frame•house and kitchen..
• Pottaville, February Zit*, his 9, . -
• •• - f O---t
A'LARGE LOT
.1430-Itiorse thsilze etigiee.
1 fifty borve ene:
2.lblrty " . 4..
ngi
1 twenty "- "
I twelve " "
6 leer "
R.‘
• " port4ble en.
8 : oetto, 601 n. x 2111.
4 . o 's
30
- 80 fL
' 2 • " 801n.z1611.-
, 2 " 24 in. x 12ft.
2 " 241 n. x Eft.
. - " 18. 4i orse,tribislas.
-I t:plight Hue bonen
aZi/y dsl4ln. column Dipo
With bolts and rings.
241/pls. 12 I. eol. pipe
450 i" 6 "
1 Lot of 4 ID. pipes.:
4 14 In.'pola pumps.
kt - "
• 1 8.
a "
Mil
And about tons good
_suitable for nailing on , at
Ble_pot on Coal Street.
Iftnr.lB, 13W-46.tf
va - E: - . • - v-_
NIF .
MiiNtrFACTVIMit nr
, . ". JQHN. A.•ROEB . WIG, , s so;\•i t ,
. -
_. •
• .
-.z. . . - TIMCIDN, 24,•.14. .
z .
?cm Inclined Plaße_sßilinV.SlEttlizrg S LI P ' ll '' '.
Autri')lloo..miogee; Fartiiis, skrs dna G •iY ,. . ,
- en.Deniekok , Cruz:tor - wad Shear,
i - ' • ' Eleir,dra, Tillets.Ac.
A L4Red tiIDCIC Of *IRE ; ROti CONS l . o ' l° i
. - . ON RAND. I' -
GADIIS Irstfir. Innt, •
• iiiIPFOr otrangMsisse viol Cohti tee; Oi Ire_tlia_
~,rioll t
w4l bit tent 4:9 l appucattuu. , • Aug. 7 1 '4I P -4 ` .
,
- '. • 'i
Mr
644 ..
. • .
E
F BrACHINRI ,
10 small
pC tin ar4 - frirle
' Pan 3
31 teasel elude, vane's %
e;
sixes
p,p feet heisting drum 4
with bola/
in complete.
eomblete.
4lf 3 eet hotstinCarne•
i
2 tlts 34 in.x.43
4 , 3 in.z43 "
. 1 " 3O tn.z3o
About/ 0 0es spit. p;sces
left. ionv *ln 41: e,sh
large/et:Of phmp 4hib'
t
lititeet: Latin w,ch 31. i
the - toots sultatile fo; •, t2
• maktag and r,p.erisi•
safety /amps..
10 Maui ofeerap
10win 140
" "sheet kr,ia
. Also always on hand 0
-lily
I•in..iutd3o,e. fans for vrrii
tiletAng ekes/nes.
seeend hand sheet Ito
htstes„...43 the Alsehdien
SPARms