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J 2 8 -67 A;it Or C9 6 irella;la We:Fault% BassuipAiiiirew is Doi Clidmoilk• le th e ratlieteranSibrthelthald ---; loth° Butt"' Digriet °I . PrW 2l7 • ~. , • • -• ' 1.. • ..: ;,- -• *-. - ••• --- -, :•,__,- . , . - - - El II L .:qlll 1 1 I. FO . I:TV--SIXTH YEAR. No.. 17. COAL - TRADE .Ali-VRTISEMENT§ tio r rt II Plrr Fa. 6, Port Melmond. WELD; .Z‘TAGLE Sr; CO Ml r ti+ratut 8:11ppo's Or the Beat finalities LOCCS ^ ", 1101INIAIN ANtI BLACK itEATIL 1 • C OA - LS9 : • 1 • r , .1 - Maiyuraeturtn,i - and Demegtre use, and ,Sute Agenta In all nitateta TIIE crisnuArrn • i ,) T W A S. IT, AND ° 1 - ".1, 1 0 - 1:::•••4 N LOILDERILY " COAt,„, .• • , 205 1 NFalinat Philedeleltta. onit.r.t: J.l J nrkeid way. New ; • I),talie Street. U.. ton:' .. ; • • - ID :Nut W. NAGLE. F). I•tfirieWitt, • liatcur A. Ittcy., atz. • • :tarn. , I V:er NU. h. Port ittclatternd A 11 . S & BRENIZER, anA Shippora of ' THE SUPEitIOIT: f f-IKEY RUN 'COAL; AND StAs'Acr:?.. - rks row Lle, Gr it Co.'s celebrated L At 4 K. RIDGE COAL 4 , , 21S Wit!nit St.. inAllaitelphia., )c (.1 : t Trinity Tiuliding, Ycw rock. 1 Y 11 Doane St., liostan T r • . , 1 . . , / - 1 i • . .'.... Cr r7.:13 • TICKIVEY .- & . NYELLINGTON. S Min6rs ariti'Shippers ofl: . Coa . • .1•1i.N,-1)/.11:. from their 13urnshib COI iI itiguankin E.i:v.:4;i . Vl• l l›; tlttll Ash.) i i ”'7.:':i'l ••I`OI•USTAIN (While Ash.) ; ' -.--- . i B) Trinity ilnittliug. Die* Turk..` , 1.1..1. Z.,.: ...', 2p41 . Walnut Stivet. rititatlelpldis. , • I tin Duane Atrert. Boston. • ....__- ' :11' I:.:t: :t No. 6 ; •1•011T IlltilgOND; PHILA. 1..0. i,-••• -.: . _ . rier 7, Port: itichmoind. TT, NEILL & Co :, ,Slll,ppvliri St Biiilll.lllloilS O A L. . ' ; NT :111' tile snieof tlitt'eele ) )rnted f 1 (*IT W IGO AN & I..:IIE . L'S. Locust Mum), • • IsVilite , Ash Coal. • ana PEACH 1.112.1 p . 4 7. T • • (lteCt. - ASII C.Ota, Frill,Nl. if Boylnn's CELF7.•• VANS LI,Y COAL • S:)le',...No•eribt in the Eastern taarket fur the 14111 altil.t47,lry.,in Creek Celebrated 1.1111:- 247 NV:Llttut Street, \¢er xr,,eti,1:1191,1 6, TrIDI:y Braiding', IProvidettee, 74 %Veylmiliet Street., Iliinton, 25 I)onme Stra.x.t. ME Pier No. 9...P0rt Itlelautiold. JOHN ': R. 'WHITE . & SON - ;. . . , Shippors of Coat, • . : . • ~ . i ,ii,..: 31r.,. VALNOT_ST., PAILAD.CLPMA. '' • • • • :. I),' jeii lb (br Storage and Sale rt Coal : . •:.t. : - .1.4 11.1.i.t Titlrti.entl: Street', Neor York. r Ni... sir! Third Avenue, New York. . ; e.t . NYlr l . ll. .i No. 99, India Street, Prorldrore. 1 - ro:l•3's Wlllitrf, aft. Washington Avenue. fisai , I ..ler3l Sineet, ItuAtoo. . itto:l, '70 1 1. -I • I . ' 11er 19 Molt tt Port ttt nol. 11.. 1 . • '' ' .i; I LOVE BOYER .& -- : C0.,• 1 . , .. SIIIPPIMS o r ft ''- .. ~ Antbracito. and Bituminous ' Coals. ] sou: ..•:(;ENTS FO:[ (*I! M 1; Eltlt.N. N I.) VEIN Brru NI 'NOUS. C0.N.1. .. , fl:t4 Walnut St., Philadelphia. ' ' (!Glycol. - 113 Mutat. St., Itruitun., '2: CuNtont Haase St:, I March 5, lTei . . - t• 10-ly Pli•r so. 10 Port lticlunond. SINNICKSON* & 00., . , . :44, - te A g e n t.. 4 to r 'the Sale and Shipment of the -Franklll ,Coal- of . L,ykens Valley," 1,, ?,.. , ..v mi g li4l,l, New Yorls, New Jetse.y end South" of Cape, Henry. { , 142 Walnut Street, PlOLndelphlzt. . 0 plees.: OS Trinity Ittaltlin...+e , Nw 'York; :,f:: Smuitiri F:4trert, 'llo%tha.: ' .. .lOSEPIS G. MOODY. Agent.' .r ri, 1;'79-:4 - - ' r, 0. Box flif., New York.: WALT.EII; tONIALDSON."& CO - X N . EII . M AZ•TD Slarrnrcs or V l / 4 - it 'Tv. _t - z•I Irferl C ' soup, AfIENT...3 fur the Celebp:kted ." TF - 101%4AS LEFIIGH COAL'.._ .0115 vrte nut !threat. Philadelphia. tltiia a +: tU Trinity illoildhaw, New York. . . ltoane Street. ltoeton. y • WilAtt?—Pier 11 Port Richmond. I a, 11-if __l __ Pier 13 North 1..641 Itschtnond JOHN 9*. -- SCOTT &. SONS, M n3cs and. Shipper s -of Coai. - . • Ac;ENTs pox rut; SALE or 11 A MOUNT.,ll:4*ltfilti , Ash. , ' -3zni'ritttNicurs^_l)eiep Red ish: ; - •b . 1 .......,1!:“. snub' voincnnd similar I 9 nil regiwctet to the;.l.l - }tE.N;!4 VALLEy.(26ai... - • • . I.,:::::It 4;ott - EN sit.t.Sionvi Ilea Ash. • ,-,. . • ) Pstit.,titra.PtrlA---No. 026 Walnut Rt. 6 , ,7:i,,,:. ,10)*Ti)N—No. 19 Doan.. Mt.': '-' - • . ' j NFAV YOltli-111 raikativrny. Chamber / all & l'reiteti, . A iT.-nls. - .Inn L'7.,- • 1 1-IT . . . = PARDA - ,:KELLER ed. - NUTTING, filin3rs , a:id !Shippers of . Coal ; , A-... , ,,1. LEtiv ni ottEENwooD, 1.‘mAgt.....-v SHAFT,. ' .. . . It ;;EV1 , ....41.1-A . LE', 1:k 7K ttivr 1.01-METLI - tY, . . NkP'i.Tll FRANKLIN RED _VIII, ~ 2 - - 0, 111.A.CK 11.111AT11 4 , . . . . • . mu itUN 1401X:a M - 1 2 . • " 2 GAItItEMON, QIILAIefiviLLE. L I ) 11141KLiby $t , .., it.o.nn. . . 1).1.,,•4; ~.11.7.41n 64 Trinity Banding, N. Y. . ) . ' ' :11:10:ttnitt Street: PlitiadelpliLi. , • tt()11113.t. s t 7.}:i.LER.& surto:la. NoItTll - . 17,- _ DAY HUDDELL & C 0. , .. Mil-vs & al. • (2:131:;..192antat St.. Plillattrlfilds. I.'ifil`4: -' s i i l Oromiway, ;Trinity Ilnlitlinc) X. T. - . (7 2) , ..i.0itt Street, IttmtAw. , • . - .. , ...z.laS t'oti the. 14.4de of the following (*delimited Cietis: 1 . . . 1iA1tid.....4.1c1 LETIIC)ll MAT, i.•: , ,i'.‘" Co4t I. CR . :4. HICKORY - AN - ) DR.trER . •; ' d...'0.•%,1)4„ anifthe • ' .11;•;;;;•31. 6 titai. diAL 'OO.'S'alWifURIN (VAL .., ~..„. :1 pler - No; Li rt... Richmond. ''' i ''''''' \V PA"''" : (Pier \o. ii Elizabellipl, N. J. . ...., 1 • I '7/ -Nat No IT Wit liticiatoood. _,• 114 ' I N ROMMELM.4I3ROTHEW . , . • I aid': AGENTS Volt • '',e'l L Asarit. an I (nen k a awl HILL t H tUIIIS, - Wkly. Ash. T'ir n-ain.rida-IiENT.V CIA lic iWty frk411.11103114: , rill* if* 1 - *. t. C... , 4. , At4..i PANIEI.:4 1 1:1ISTEit ;Seep 'nal Ails ' ' 1;!::i11) .D.r. SH'2AI-Brrilnievc.- . . 1' AVEN'3 GOING LEHIGH at Elizabeth Port .- •!051,6 Walnut fat.. Pltllnda. , t;fll,-0. :, ‘,.. 21 ...Mottle. tttree•t, ilAnktott.. • i az,o 7 i 53. Trinity 111111111 nm New licirk. ::,: Ev. t I. Ati KIN T—S.A 'ME U LP:s it vcal, tforbit i il. by r ... !u )U'\ 111 , 1 E. - P. 1 1 PIIANi. Nlurch IS, '(111.-10 ANDLUSEN BROTHER & CO, *D4I Shippers of • .! C ' o' A. L . • -- ~, - ' 011 (' .aptinS.F.Cothirls. Larqd lovasla.. Lama Gap.. Wi(for,barry., yAkigit. sod ether .. . 'VVIiITE: AND. RED•ASH'COALS . (Pt. Itichnio(id, , ... l• ' r '..• IL; ri.: v,,; \L')l4o,v,m,;:;}:ilzallethport,• , - „ .i • ii 4 • . t horsey Lily. ' . r.lt Witlntit.titsmt. Rtilladrlphis. , :,..: ,•):•! • 111 n.r.idsvay, New 'York.. • , . 1 . fi 5 44Ane 'Kt.. Buctrtn.., • inn I, 4 I. i .!. ; , .pvt•7l - .1 ' ' i t- • . " [VII. XENDRICK. . . 'I7VEY 8z ICENDRICI.S., iklp?ers of the Celebrated • 1: 1 - % J 13.1 or li Rainboiv -and - Ke stone, CIO ALS-:' ■ • • ir:4rr 50., 91 r.rt itlehmeid. 1•16114i1elplikno-23111 Okra Strorl. . i • Street. • • • 110 , tairt—Nia. it Doane SD., Jas. 11.11;e04. n ~~ri~~. , . . • Washl flatus. D. t.--Ileari Jose*, taillsa. 23. 04t I'. lan!' , r Fort niclptionN Pier N0."1.7, Port R!ctirsiirnd. AUDENRIE,D. NORTON. & CO., -Miners'ana Sh!ppers of FIRST CLASS . 0.4:L, LOICUST Prom oar two Large and celebrated CoModes . 811.11 EL ....... .IStORTOZ.4' dr. LO. 'VON TO aa 00 PRI DOE: 4t, ;MT I LC WED Lorawanwr. Free naming Red Ash. and Preparat fon. .COLR'ETT COLLIERY. gwan, Long !,c, IlltrULE CREEK C0LL1ERY.......C. Culkelt, Prod. ENTURPRISE COLLIERY, T. Baumgardner, Pi oil. lAeust Mountain and Loebt'rhy, absivlaSchttyll:lll canal, tb all points secemlbte by (51X lialirat - Street, litiliatelAin. Offteteat Renadway; ?few York: • • .1. 27 Doane Street. iIOSG.II. • . • J. T. AUDENItIED. • C: F. RORTON, CRAP. D. NORTON. R. GORRRLL, . • • Jan. 1, 70. . , Pier Ico.ll, Pt. kuchniond.. • SNYDER & •SHOEm kRTIR; Shippers and Deniers iii • I COAL , acme Aosurts To 0. IV. - I , lFrvirs irma. I . PINE . FOREST COAL • 224 Wawrczar„ I 83 TRI7ITT_PVILPING, • .1% rmn (Jut. • LOUIS u,sim:EmAKTU.. Jan 1,';0 „J-ly Pter Na. IS Port Ittehmondt. . " ' G COllO b El ItILPPLUCI, X. F. CIOADON. lI.P.It.ErPLIEIt. REPPLIER, GORDON t& CO. !1t1X112.11 A7:I3 . BIIIIWEItS 01: •: . i Locust Mountain, Mammoth Vein; Red 1 Ash, Lorberry, and j. , • • . " . TOWER CITY, LYKENS VALLEY cons, 1 29 : Wn1nut Street, PltllmuSeir'hia. . • Orricel: 11l Itruadyrny, (Roma INu. , XI New yortc.. '2l Donne Street, (Ituosn . .I , ';' U. 3), 'Bataan.' tnureli ,7'70 : . 1 13- ;' TLIOXAS .CAIX, • r i:SIOURIS HACKER. JRSSE X. LOOK. HACKER & COOK. jßiurPsas or . LPCI.:ST gOV, LOCUST NIOUNTA.P., BLAU* HEATH ALSO, OKALEIL3 IN OTHER. FIRST IaI'AiATIVZ Or -White and 'Red - Ash 'Coals; No. 214 Walnnt Street, Whurveic, Schuylkill Ritter. JOHN 11. STltYlipt, • j 81111 , 1 . E1L ANP AGEXT Ilaylkill paren, Pn. Jan.' I. '7o.—i Scipujtkill Tthuttq: 3 A: AtE S J. • C Miner anii.filliprn of ttic. CeletoOt.ell LOCUST - MOUNTAIN • ;;COAL. Ell • - POTI ' SV 1 . 1/1.;. /Lt.. Ce). - , PA. Jan I; ID. COAL. WEBEO TO 1.1.1F0R11. THE pITIIL/C; .TITAT TIIC 51.1.1:1:1011 AND NVY.:T.L lICNOWN .\ HENRY . CLAY COAL; :';Vhic it gave such unllouna.dsuti , lactl'. , T t!e past yew ; will cot:Moue , to be sliSpi;e4 PURE and FREE FROM MIXTURE, And enn only bchad-f..oin our_ ex.elu;,lve :Igents for ail tlde-water nuukata. RON'JEL, JR. AAIRQ. Wninnt - Street; Phibula. Orliees, , , 43 Trinity 13tzildlikz, 71i4rk I • Dave Street, Huston. • I ' I • • To wisCe.n all . orders should. be add 'ts::e(l ITS COAL IS A lIANDSCYSIE;IIULKY, LIGHT, -FREE BUT NINE Intl we {dodge ourselves to eoutinu Al e its PREPARA TION SECOND TO nd etinthlently recommend It as the PIST FREE 111.711NING t;OAL iti rfie ;%1A'11.1q717 . , ROBERTSON, GUITERMAN & Co. tareh.l2, 713 • REM & HARRiS.' - , s• • est and Purest Coal In the Market WE have rrtii.je Pilensive Iplprovernent.s .Itirlng I •• the past lamscnt,'lvistell will lary,ely ineretucc! ductiois hereafter. Every effort will Ire used io • KEEP UP Tar. STAN6ARD, OF PREPARATION Inl nbtention 8111 be given tn sizes rot ninnu , r" . PurPosefg- Si Mil , . L la atw iJ ihlppeil by Itsltioul not lIMI or Wultcrated. SOLE, .AGENTSi • • To Whom an °rain§ shopld be itdclretsed) ,jOHN Rommp., Jr.i & eRa . . , - , . I -. . - 1--• , . . , i ~.. 1 1105% Walnut, SR, rhiboda: Chincss, .21 Doane St.. Horton. 1 -....-. . SS Trbotty Bandlng, New Tpik. , isin 42,71+, . - 'I"O_IIIA3IIIrd.CTUILICIIA ANI? 1713ZIUS 02' / stsion Ihmitnes, tn • Soho licill Onnutv— TA NirICE that I htive sold to ALL/801i I ItA...NA.N t otrort.Carbon,an intevestin tny PATtliiT arVEAMIIIUTON and have even' therm tt e l entire control of it to said Coun t y. with power to let m ltios oners or to berinamdne Memo* for th mann. facture and use of the same. DAVID Vlltalk. noslatoti,Pa, Jan. 1. •03—Itt snAmoxti. =EI Ilill 11112 ARTICLE, ME - .:~? r ENS! Mitabelphia, C. SCHITYI, - ILI, NAVIGATION. Shkrthig Wkorrts nir , ATTIMICITE COAL at Gictitilc% - Dt4witre elver, Phltaielpliz. • LEWIS .A.UDIWREID & , • 1 • 15r..1511, FOY TVE SALE. Or THE VO:C;Creek: Dialafraii Cola irnespsao4 'Dtamod P,M end phut lirti ifLite .(^J3S t'alm.tt PhilauletpLta. 119 iiroadwlty. tiew.York. Ruby. screkt,, . • . DACIS riArso:c.zw.v.grrn:rAsT. ASirta . 3l3. • 1 DAVISIMMSON 311\ AND win.rEws triE ecittrATEn LQ El) AS FL CO• .v Nn.l. e Walr.ut, Street, l'hillidethla. ;N. - J.llll Itranclurny, llown No. to,Crtiiity ••''‘.‘ *. • No. fl hoarse Street, Itootorx. 91:F.ENWICri, DMA:WARE AVE:s . ; Jan: 1, 'el—l- I • T. HOMAS C:PARRISH i f i SIIIPER Ain I.IL.I.LEZ IN . „. . Letl"l-oattOliill rind Sittinijuong ...\.... .c.„mi,........:„fi, en•Corn.r.nlsi:on.SollOte.i rtrltl ' 'en op favor.o)lf..-Teriu..l. , - . • - . • ' ' . • \ l_ • ' !Celce-24 - 1 Walnt2t St., 12.11:11;1111161 • May; I. 'Ca . .--_,. 2 . .. 2 , 1 ... :, „.; • • totbrrrq ffrech.. • EAST FRAICKLIfi LORBERRY -VEIN 'COAL. I'L . Pot•sZ-;T,R.,.:'?ir::'..RLIW,, talltLION sena are :ay sole Agents. I'artics ardertrnt Irani them ratty. always depend upon got tiat; a pure article- • tIZ Walnut St, Philadelphia. 0171CP:qt.; No. Iti Broadway, Mom tt, New.'l:arkz. tn.% J 3 Daune strt et, Itaoin ti, Laotian. Jan I, '0!).-1. II EN HY Mat. - *.:11 • II , JOHN D. 11 ISS EXIWTTEL. WM:HEISSfstiBUTTEL & C 0.,. ISlil n perm and Ilrholesul . ct 1/calrrn In ••. • Schuylkill,.. Lehigh and.. bO .Cumriand C 0 5 TI:INITY 111'11,141:40, 111 11116ADWAY, , Ilootn:81, ; (1. 11u::'5019, NEW YOll/i. Vie ,A - 4..zats 'fort:. New York. and VlAnlty for the Soh. (111.VNT G eft.:t; 111111 - 11 4 :., nud HAAS'S TunK Et BAIN C 0.% i t s. • march :IL '7O I DAVIDSON, YOUNG & CO. Ir , I101.F.1:1.1.1: DEA LEHR IN. Locrst''aintrrArx. SIIAMORIN, LEIIIGII CUM iseittANo. seitAsToN & wita-gsßmittr. =ME R015N11.N0,1 1 1, TRINITY BUILI)IN(1., NFSiYontc. 7.1. DAVIDSON, formerly of Tyler 8 Co. • . S.t.M*LD;YOI* to - nnerlyol Gardon A.Co ROBERT K. IllTClildA7 , l Jun. 15 : '7e *WHITE; FOWLER & SNOW, (Succers.n-li !t; John While & C 0.,). , 1 • SII.I,II•E3iS 01 • 'LOCUST - t ' WILI:EmBARRN, tiCli..i.NToN and • • CUMBERLAND • C Ofnce:-No. 73 'faulty, nalltnn;:, 11 itruitlavity, Lprll l •d 4. . • T. 524 - ,NsoN t.'0330.1i.EN. • ,!, • . (COAL. VAN VATICKT 1T & STOUT, • • • )I.T:um. , SIIIPPEILS ur 1n t: • Celebrated •TuttonT & "Stoat" (Let 110) COals, Front icw Et;r::ll , • lftn3 .Itont Collturies, twin' liazlcd.oii, Pa. 1).11N - urea dire.... from tillnes on board p•r. liottgux, :1114 NEw R. 41: NS t l. (44-.& 43 Trinity nr.ll , lintr., ottlee%:, • li2 1.:c0:144,3y, New York. 11T,inporat.lat li:o itrdadwny.) , litty , • VEIc : PLAN(K c ATWOO,I), • wilutes.i!Li; DE.u.nns is G . • • sciiln7l.l:ll,,T. , , • nips saAmomix h • ()•,- A_ , • 5 :„ (ime, \l!,7r Trlnfity Ittiiidlng, 111 Ilrll'a4way, • I'. W. V r-I'I,A K, Jil/1 x, 17t., NO. 111 BROA (7.00mx 23 and L• Aritoi.kk - .C,LF: 1)1:A1.1.:1:5 IX , .. Li:i lIGI.I, :WILK K. - 413A Rt . 11.;, . ..- . .I'ITTSTON. 1it , ...1) ASII,. , , .. • • , ' , - M kiiANOY ti('lt .I,.NTCIX ~' : , J I . LOCT * ST mouNi.AIN; ctrgDERLAST), 111t0, ..D TOP, ETC., C a l'N. LS; , . 1 Sor,E-AGENTS ow . Menu Yo.r-k nail the. North :nt ' the ,Pi•le!)ratell rOtilgelt, ItII)(fE FItEE I:PUN ING LF:lll(ift COAL.I TljE l'itl.)11:0;i:•:,• 'rilE rowt:LioN semi-bituintis inl other I; rat-rata l'ulllerfrs.. :• .' J AMIN W. C.A.I.ItwET.I.;, r. B. eN i UN NT, WALTFIt. WESTON. I _ Aini4 3, 1 .'0 ...' • 1 0 .. FFICE OF • TAE NIAGARA.ELEVAT ING, C0.,8 Com m. kata A.l. ll,hock.', PO4AI-0. N. 7 1. : . L . COA. CURL. ..COA, ' . . TUE NIAGAIZA . F-I , II:VATING CO., ihaN ng a ,largeNurrio. or Lot an Dockage, will be, pre :well lit the opening, of.naelgalloit to receive. from tin Erie hallway; Canal, or Lakd, any quantity' of .COA L au. Nip rage or tratthhipmenif to any place East by. - I oikul or west by the Lakes, upon as favorable terms : aay parties in Buffalo. Tli Lir lot . Is. well located rota genttral illy buitlnetot. c. . .. ': • 1 :CI - Itt; 'LATCKV, V ire-Presitlen.t4 ... Nturell . 'O9 . , „. ' t 13—t( . . . . DM ttiitittß Atrichiittru, • nvEtt: 20 'TEAMS EXPEBIENCE IN TUE. 11 . L441Nk...N5 ., , 1 INDILICICS • . •• ti ' - • AMEIUCA Cli.9:c CA in.& • - N'Tll3, 1.1 , 4 LiW I The i ndernii;nai who Is a pr - tied, Chant. ;gamy tacturer, Informs Coal O.,erators and 'often( Unit he Is prepared to male )'tat' or Crane Clial ' nm•of every at short nutlet% Partlealar altentlort given to Flat s'haln for slopes. Par former In fortnat ion mead for t!trvulirr. Feb. 15,'64-7-->',[- ND C4IIARE ROD AN D WIRE SCREENS. . - ' . ; J. - I:4AI.3I3ENSTIF.I.N. - •, - . . . . , 1 • sz.v.v.tir,i' i crritra: or St/I...TARR ROD ANID W I LDE SCREENS. , . • EN D c., .. PATTE FiII3REARY 4. I. • ... . , .' --- .- .MINEDSVD.LE, SIiDUTLICILL Co., PA. ` TAW SidtADE DOD, SeII.P.ENS, ON ACCOI:: , ..IT nt : their; mrperlor strength and durability, are preferreAUtn all others WI erever, t Med. Screen Bolts; all i. - izes,alwayson hand. Orders prnntpt iv' tilled at intKiemtepriecs. • .' . • A1ay,24ci.09,./ . 2-2- . ------- • --------,---, . 1\114....NT? PA.01934P1i OP . COAL § CIIEEN S. • ~ I.At(orzra'rrtic. - E. Ig J ecrit. L. LAATEtEN!TEIN & CO. ; Suceetwors tg ol!na. Dielinit„ . , iManufacturer qt Coal Screens, . . , , Of 'thaiLateit'and • I MOst Approved Style', The tAndemlgned who aro practical Screen Matta facturers,l informs ers,3' Prs.lrfitonr and others, that they are manufacturing q. Iigvr.COALSeItEEN, pat tentist Jnne',2l., IPICA, and another patented August R, lstsi:ithey gnarantee thatlhe x outwit' always retalp Iprorigivarsize until ertilrely warn Mil: • . •• I hand. Screens ;and Segments 'always op hand. f . . • ", 1 • We respect follySolici t acontlnuanoe of the Patron. age heretoforeso,ilberalls . bsstowed. • •, • ; • . 1 .. - ~'• • 1.. liltliliKNSTEr.% a C. 0., ' - '• . limp:rad 4., rear of 7..sterly's liardware Mere, !' Jan I, 79 7 -1- - Pottsville',. Pa. _____. • .. ii:n• ° S Emmett.:; ' 16313 1 " Isaac Harr& 100 " Peter-11014qt - , '' 19200 reemsat!thtil Ch., 1,314;1337011d,101'; Imp(. d Re R. w a ii i'.. _ 412 egerei,' Andrew Car0n........_..!._ - 870 444 . " Win liiontibmery ' , • 12 110 .• . 'Robert Lyub-..-.::.... ... .. 1 . ........4---.--- //t 2 ; 1 Craw Greeisaieeill. ", V :- , 3: :Acres l'in. J Ilniter, :Feb M, i3211......-----.:4' 62 N. 53 " • - 'Wm Zunmerman......-'... ~ -/... • 1140' 45 " ; .'litchohts Brenner-.'..-....- ~.... 1727 . 126 acres 35 pa. Wm OrselE-1624.." ' • 161 7 4 z. 7, - , " ; R D trunks —,._....t...... .....—... 141.04. 35 " late Gree.stawslt and A H y ? tainger, 47 20 ;. ................. 4211 • ' i'h - Oiretia - ra (ti. , • 267 acres Fredertek ticke1q....................., 210110 370 80 ps John A t4ll ver..,» ,-. `... ......: ISt 30 174." pi, •I) DecirertataiVEckert... ,.. ......l 111 36 110 ",• ICader.Kizumar—..---... - S6lOl 11 " Barnett tritet.;......4....._;_ , 36 t 2 , . . . NORTH 9-V lON DP' . -..... •-•_. 164 aces X'3.( ill wt keb-111 u r n Ed 5tnith........,:, . 11240 191 21 • "Ye 191432 Ctr0me.............. 1W 10 th10y.......4'.:....- ....,.. ..........:. sir", etarirs 0, o:v4%in for ute Ajtras, T:Gtati deed; 454 steles - . Langs-.....-.---........i. 14142 `Jambe thry .14_auer.,...;-.-...:.,« 4.4... v 11010 ..4130,4 " • 0 0rit 1111.11er-...:—..........-.4. 111 Ai 30 " -• ' Beattv . .. • l4llW' 434 - Samuel niefra4r4.7.7= - 7...... 1 1 . $173 41), .. - , - , 3iattbowittaish.l..--....--11 14106; . • Joan IL Broom dk Os • . ,_- IP ste.r.es: •Citriallito Paistal July A Tit 144 6 a co ,' it*pw Thitl• I• '" •.. ~i .11402 • i 4 ' • 1 / 4 3 /400 1 / 4 MIR?. • ~ • •! 377 sees). ' John Memo July 1172. . -......: .is 71 1i MEM • ROPE. - • ~. . . ~ ; 10) ~..! oor 401. ac Rabe 11,41pslasta 101734,.....,, RS 01 yr - • 7 • x jottrrAdyritir, ay - • , , West Back ilitagotatie Owl god lam " aßkt • • ' TUCKER CARTER 'oo'.. Sew 'York. - , 137 acres 116 e t ciao ateasullaii•-• , r--r------.r' ICI Ali alma Hem= Witt Centres, bright or palptelt. ' ISt " 117 V Ver lllo -= , - •r 1 ~,.11 Is j The Rope mann tired by this lirm are conside rwit '" 120 . Ttec u an lialitir-,1 , ------ ,, Is i by a ll parties usins thent , the best, and bandabtaesi 121- -",-. - ~... , 1watn....f.,?....: --...•.-.4i lOW ....-" 1 0 1 Po trade in .the woridonwiettivartably EMIR wit"' •3' ," • ~"- 1/104fW 6041 --.„--t;4_, --4"-"-"4' .I*' . drawn from tho best Norway Iron. The tar .t ' - ' • • . Ritt= 3l .. ~ -, • ''. '' • • 10 the tr. R. NaVY are tined witak Wlr• Roped r y e - Jesse 1 -...«..-- .-4 1 ,si sit by thls.lirm. Samples it sae Raps can Immo wig". • .73 11113*homa &Yin 'L.-......-..,, Itt 0 , and orders taken, and 011 inlaritaticatilives. 1044 • 70 "' ' • .:14 31 1N reass , ------4--;-;Z•f - ,, MS orders promptly•Alial arsousabia /atm sad etria. 03 H. • l.l .0 1 . 1 31, W?,r 404 4r------"--" •.• SO Mrs furnished b y 1 • .3...11.1141311318031 ,- '• 111A6 0 , - • t • - .--.—....4 , 4171114 owns_ Its klinsrs'26ational itutkOrollasilk 1 100..' . ~,,',:, MLItst11, 11900 r 111 ...""--•.--d, ; -MtlU Jaiil3i 10 •. • . .•,364110 ' 130 N 1 Dornansh—.— . sew • • • . _ . , . , • ..- ~ , I . # • 4 - ' • • 1 IMI TO COAL OPSRA,TORS. attrizEts. AND FUTINA.CE I3 . I. .agibr de LOU ,NLaiconiative Italldeis, i . ; Elk/ likAcrt sirtrxr. Pm LA DE.LPILIA, PA.,. Woula, c0 1 .,11 your otteation to their CbUtrr if and Furnace Locomotiors tle, , ,lgned for .inside or oistsicdt work,and for any required usage of road and sharp est.eurven, with en:raelly7 to draw from 59 -to 9lrJ tons Insci twat. • i• 1 !laving developed In I th the Anthracite and•BV turutsoust etTl9frof or l'el pxylt nnin, the yawl a . utera3- . Yza 'Ai a a ^} Lor:olt , i'ir , i i toe country, they offer or Itii o infidebee Abet r v. ritaut. styles of .Locomotive Engines with every 014rwintre tit their workman ship and perfortmlnee, aild refer to the runny now in ;vend i lona 'the several! mining districts, furttatga and formai in the Mule and ronutry. , - Theli ; smolt, Grk cost, great, . power developed. to erther with their durability, great economy and light dully expenses over animal pawer or Oralillar/ loconintive use. Os : Aroven _by Mar czperltaoo OS oteversl years) Inane *cad, saving in . expenses . ant ftekat 4o pay 010 r :first cud in a tea/Mori 1i.7-kmme .• i EMI EMI POITSVILLE, wzrrE . LSH EfEMMI nod. MEE .101 IN W. ATWOOD. 2-it ':• i \ANT - WESTON, WAY, rrEW, YOUR. t. 3:1.1-4taty TR WE contil tio❑ of our,. Treasurer's 1 publish will run sariu tereated woul containing ti '7-BEAM:UMW l• trli3BlATti i LANns.- oco , talorus of an AO. 4 - 4. ki., , el - naly.... Itreettag the, mode • of Aefllng al:weal- - ..........._ ~.zeearid forother par, poses:* plumed Itarch, Isr, and the further stipple. merits; passed thoreto on ho 13th of March, 017, and the :an ditY./f.areh. 1171, t ie Temente! . of the County, of Schnylh.nl ucrebytteca notice to an persons con. corned there! that, Uhles, 41 the - County; Shad. and F.,hoil Taxes due on the :fOtlowlng tracteof unseated Iniet..sltuat . In gehuyllilll County. *repaid before thoolny of sold, the wholeler such parts Of each tract n-'` wilt 1: 4 3" the cares and cost chargeable thereon, wilt be sold at the Courti' l lionse, In the Eorongh of Po - 01,1111o s ou 1116 , . • , • • . • , BE'CONIC) 3101 DAT or JUNE t Vert - • I, , an:the c•intinuerTli:.*ndfourrinseut ' from day to dap , bin tirrearavN. , of lazes doe said County. and the (mat accrued on sash restatctlrely:. - • • ; • I . , .PORrE/f.. A: , t trnm:l Brofaehl!. IL. Cb. . szt ai..res.3l ps ephetiltenget.::.-...---.—. 030 gi 115 -79 do Sa muel Eantniel • ' '-.. SCOl,fO) -.- • - f'Zvw Riekesxis .1" O'Brien. nat al J n DOT 90 acob Inge 4 1.7 d , Pnvi , l 435 001 left, Fitkrbes cb. , 110 „" " ••1 fl Si " 4 ,1 ft: pi 1111111) Kutasclrnars.,. 223 " i coal Leirnatd • • " Mtwara Co: _ _ :177 acres 123 pe il. , * Asap, Peter neutber a J . .. . goiter. Nwt 1.11, 1793„..-. 101 II - .p.inles.,ll.l-tf.toni'Wtn"4.6ans..,4„ Munson. ' 100 acres, pt, of -190 no 131T* coal /and, C Tower, 11 Ileberllnt. June 15,,18x) ..- ".4)000 LO "• pc 9rAr no 111 ri 1.1 •}l.eberlingi Feb , I Ilft " pt Of .7:36.e f4l ps .1 Huber.. JUE4IS I iI 36.1 96 .1 • . " 166 . pt; pt. of ti c 1145 ps 'Win. Iloeb; ' . June ~ I.**Zi • ' . '-' . 1664 Ziki " aPI 2 trite= e01)1 land, -1 tract - 0f:146 • ' • • ea; 4 ps WI J.llOl Hain, 11ity1244. , ' Ps::s, and the Oth r tract /141.5e5.13/1 • ps Wtll/nnlrl Hal ) . August 14,1636_ . , Inn. 1fun565,.."r0,4 ..e - Pelano. ~ • 7,31 • .141 ps • •mal - itunl, 1r Lebengood, 1 4 4ay . ' 21. 1701.. , , • • - . • - 835 04 ..,r , Wm. 111Unzn. ' .•.: -• , ~ 111 " • ps coal land WI lsth rirnt tria......:.: 1131 40 '4.10 ' "1 (.41 Itaub WtlBlll.Nov 1703 . ' :.... 119940. Roar I.Orriel., 1 ‘ ,44 41J "GI (4611 :had WtllSth NOI, - . 17 . 214.-: IL2I 40 479 '' GI a, \l ' t 1itt e 1 6 3 . , :. 0 7 1. 4 1trt1 ; , in 4...- , ! ... : '112440 ' N , rphen engel: 2) , ..1 "-15 s, pi , of 443 at , 611 pa, Wt 3d Aprll, ' 176-1 ' J 41 " l'etbr Lanz 1 ohn Ilanluln d i H) - • " pt C.( Nancy Klutn. , • - l'l NEU ROVE 1" , aore4 tut. "Vatontlue Hroi 4:.' lut.,llloltnel I.l.lRho' •118 . " n'. - t , ":ntz &KHz oT " ' tell Fe!!..• ~ It " , - Solin W. Olon 1:: '1 ,". WM.. Ma vton .. 30 " • • •Wctniel 11 on ts 12 " , Itudolph Halo. 4 .." Joseph 1.1.. 11(41 12 V• • . 15:Ln1..1 Wilms:, 10) " • •A,l6in Ilellnuti :14 " Jab Houtz... / ": ult. John .K.11ne,..,...: Albert Bulttley, Ilk , `` - (;vtirgp-nutil... 4tit , " " - .70 1 / 1 1 Scholl ;_i j /1I "; litiry Saylor.. '3l " lionort Irvine.. 29 I% Atirrilinlit rihek• 110 " .311ciinel Stock), 10J " - . Writ. 5r1ue:......1 LI " .Inci/b 51;i rkeyl 21 " , • Junin - Union..., 121 " .. tliriettru 'Mich 1 lot . Ptuegrovo Lodge, No. • .! D,rt.tcll I:O r aeret Sf-Itzer t rr,et. ... (ho. S.- 7 , 3 ' wortrat Killinn' Lon 1:0-" mt. tn.ry,t. LlNe.: 2) "• 2-prout P(l..l'r LIFO, "rat. ii(4lll:ll.i.te, 71 • sl ntlin I.engel. •:"..4 " • Con ta:l I.enuel. 244 " • John Mover 116 ." John. Sni-11....... 1.9 " , •l'otor Sri eclt • 81 "1". s warner Canip. IA " Daniel Stahl—, :Martin .1 7 c11,1....1 100 " - James Longues-. Al " Martin I - city... 4 • . . • - hummit Br sue 4i7 "..r•-.7 rs. 17nriiicl Hain.... 1,1.1 -" 2+l-47;i. 3 '4 V.., Phlll , - - - Amity Eeklor, FredAlesser, ... Jacob Shalley I : i.... P.l :Milburn...``.! • ... ' 1 late Sluttley, lieu ry S (load , Jacts Mushler.. v ll„. , 1 • 1.11/titim Jiofie. "- .. ro - t' •' ;10 ps. Geo. Artman Match' 9, 1813. ... 1 . ... .6 .t.:r.r,r,r roliwair.w.• ', . • Now York dyad Soh ciekiEt ( bat - ctinipriry. - 117 t nitres Abraliain thoketi ' ' - -- - li0•41 117 " l'oti.r•Niti.t.lo '•, ' ' , w;" Philip. Kramer ' • , . IS 2,4 art " ,1114-letsidr IlelTner • , ' '1 . ... 31979 id " Datil jlertnan I ............. 301 t 6 54 "E. NVlllialm , 1 . zr.24.K0• 2 ... -.• ." Thomaft wsibutm 1 1 . ... .. ,1., 17570 " Georg° Rase 'ii y 7.41 ' .1. L. Dunia , . i 1... 115 88 A brah a tit Bowen tract ' , ' 'IZ7S . -FranilsArtilla • • -'. ' ' • '140•70 " .11.ithrirs. Artllla ' I- '9OO , " ' l'hillp Mtllor - ' I ' - "- • - 6570. -, Thomas 141111 man 1 1. _ 1... '-12 80; 1.11 " ' Alo•iihniii- Wtlmuu 1 .., .4.:. 'l4 75' 6 ". E dward Connellyi.. I 7 ' 'lO3O, 71 acres 151 p.'. A.Artley - I 7 ' 108:66 - . ..11". I.ldy;or J.: • G. I{: Helms- I I• I ; 211 '•M lloran tract . ... .I • l ' 5 7 5 23 . ... ihredato Cti, . - 107 " John Iterkenbill..; •I. ..., . ,• • , - Pinkortim, Hog, Ostifivyin . tb. 1:11 ` " I,t, of .Johlt Kldd ' ' Zictm•-tnina it Werntt. .1 - . . Idi pa 2 ads. Samuel D Franks dated ' • - 4'.1, . 1/20. '2'2, 1.121, and Aug . L 31 14;1 ....... ........1.., :A 38' .1,1,1(1 Mind - us,' c feed. .. ,I • :4';' •" t 'rntz ' ' -• ' • - • gro 72 Jon - • John Ajainalract 1 ' • I l ' 102 00 •=1 " .41eorge (710tuter ..... . ... .'. .. I. . ...... ...... ..... .4.. 1 .: "A-1 40 "11_ " .selinll it Damian' - ' ' • f 10000 1 . • - . . JtiAn BClPlllari, fixed. • -;-, 10 ';'`. 1)1. of .ocorgo - A Zerby tract ..... -. - ..........1 ZO, , - • ". Gelrge Prin. I - 101' 4 N A•lien...'.. . ;.• 1,.:",.•,. ; ., I . - ...litSH roU7siniP. --.....„, (74ritles S. (bze, i rruSte-e.. '2-'1 11 Renker ' :10 " ' W" Adana.,- • ' ' • 210 " ' 1 ,1 4 1 . 330 actes-Thos E'en, • ' 10 ". ". 401 mires .3 Deeme...- .4 4 ' ' Jacob Itobblns - ' 4 11!-i" 1 tliarlea "Lettings ' - ' ' • • ' .k'tenth '.4ntericart t bat CZ. 320 " 1 Mart In Deal'" 1- German A miniranitbal (b. EMI 1.012 t) lid " MI =1 ELI 40.3 . 3r, niirif: 4l44 .... 7-"ini"&, (b " - Lindner' 191 "ll I.lpcluer . ..... ...... .. ...... . deorue Trautman. . • •. 931 '" W Jackson ' - - 50 52 212' " .1 .... . . ... j 100 15 John °afraid; Alen. (broom, - E. .......... tU ner& 0) ps, T Lkwls.sind A Iltown., 11(01 t of ) 4 ) ) 'Acres F Bilawrelser- ! 48 Ivry; •• • Auden tied Cameron Lnekharl. L 1 Ski 2412 " , Lewis & Aaron 110wen..:24282,100 It Yo x TOWNSHIP. , .. . • . . . 3 , :. " - .- •Wm Bowen Shooter flirt - 116 40 010 . Jao M Rickel shoentniker,lSelbert...'- - 350 00 :i.V, •, "• itachaet Dickerson • a 10403 40 1 1 " It Dickerson tioorgit Sliller.-...': 15000 100 ' " Stephen Ringer Carnp & C 0,.,.. - 36E0 .rlihn Reihly, 80,„4750nd-eztate • 100"! I S Ell ' 1 ............: aid co 00 4 .": , -' .1 s Ileinly.. ' • 90000 100 " 'l' B Nichols SpayriLuther Brook::...- 240 00 400. "i • .1 Swartz Sam S ]tarn. Jr ' • 0000 211 " 126 ps. John K01b... James Ryan ' : 6073 I /4,4,a in ,t• 'Abet (F.,,1i. Gowen, _Agent.) , • • 91 " Mary Merti. 191 " Yost 31ertr • t 171 " 15 Nachbar . • 4. 4- 10) " Deorge Miller - ' • .. 062 " 'telly Davis . _ ...... . ..... - .... ... .-.......- ...... ... 2.: - ,1 " • ThOinas Davis ' • ' .14 " Stephen Ribger ... . .. . - . . :71 •: -L Herring, Pottayille Water C0.,....:-...., 1 . Iveziropt.r TP. ' 291 nerec Schall & ;lantana, late Schap A teidip ' I. , In " - y • • - - - .... . - --- . ......... .10! " John Barman ............. L. . t Thomas „I dame and others. 107 acres' 01 ps, George Eckcr, June, i1tn....„.:..... 40 ", 40,ps, 1:1 liinbenhaner. Sept., 19.3....., - • I rw For* and Selnikek ft! (3xrJ Cb. 438 acres l Jinnes Millin ,tan. ... i-....._ ... . . -..,—...,. .43. i " Jamesliloiter,,..: ................ -.-..-...... 61 " Abraliant •L ßoyer.-_ - . . ... - . -1..... 30 " JaCob'Loose,. late Greenawalt_. ; .._.... ~110 " 51 lA, :4'. Ardley - - I i kk/inalit Branch,R. R. Co. - l' •3I ' " •13 Rain .. --i- .... -_ .. ; ....... . t .. . e.....--:... '' Ciarntiertain; Jfichards J.: O'Brien. i 138 a nes Jacob KnOoll 4 Minton Riegel . ~.--' .......-.t. .... ........- ail " John Rirniaelbenger i 9 - 1 " Phillip Webber-..... ........ ...+.4- :5 - Adam Riegel. ....-.-----..:.t.:".'..-.... -N i ." Daniel ILiegel -.. :111 " John 11:0011. .. '' +,^ 'X, " Chtharlm. Moll :IT) " Phillip Dim melberger ' • 11,3 " John ...•Italeitr 2,7 " John Riegel.. ~ , . ; t . ...-""2 • " Philip Riegel 1 43 '" J:iiih Mil ler 357 . " Renry:Lloe . - . , ! • Iwil ant ff . . /to l ATURPAY PNING APRIL 23, 1870 ilk SALE. We infcirma li4*lon: of the 1 ; 1 ,4 : IVe and ft As. Tl* in" reserve the PaPt". - 28140 .4 146 tin Iwo es 632 48 73313 13 rl ',l 1 ear y Jul.r , _ MI SO mama SJUP IMES ..... .... -5 2$ —.. • 214 06. ' 37 74 . Tiger 1 12 • „.... 29) Jacob Welt .... ... 10 92 1 a 5 21 .12 01 I IS 20 82 51 40 041 74 63 24 ti ;;;;;; ME liEl!I • 4f, " • • 160 ................ :164 .el ........ L. I.'o. of U. 11 - 1 60 '`ls • ~4(61) SU ;... ft 4 I :t4 35 - ' 8108 r 5 b 1 54 F I=l's • t r— 2100 R. Cu. .; ; • • 80.81 ; Y.lminnPrrnan: <lt linmel Hain apsl .......... . ...... L.. 4115 260 252. 210 2 10 11r1 ' 171133 . .2, 10 1.3 woo' ; ... 1 100'00 €2 -..' 49 95, 15i CO 70E8 ,90Q ESE run CHURCH .AYD TRMPRI?- MEM of thile4el- 1' p h le.ielr the Crining.' Moderator, Rer..tobar W.' D. D... In._ tbo „ First. Presbyterian . . • Church. Pottatirle, on Tuesday eirning, • 4 !Alan Ittli, 1870. "Puldialreo tri re finest of Presbytery. i Text, Ecclesiastes Ll 5, Revelations ,^l, -,: . . I , "rhat which to ;Tucked eitunot be Made airi e r t ;, and that which le wanting cannot be number :' , "And he that sat 'upon the throne satd, Rehbld; 1 roakeallthlngs new: And he said unto me, 'Write; for these words ate true and 4althful,"; / R a period very closely eerie:pending with • .. that of the division of the Ptesbvterian 'hutch in America, the struggle againstletein r. ,rance. diem the principle of total :abstinence _. been going forward.:- It was at Saratoga in • . , that the Anierican Temperance Val ion took lin stand upon that principle,- and froin that date e,eount t more than thirty years war for na -1 t onaloiocial, legal ~and ecclesiastical reforth on. Meuse' of intoxicating drinks. - Ti. gils ri4 of Church re-union, • reconstruction •- bed union, • When the humble inquiry,•Lord what wilt thou haVO me to do? is rising with fresh interest and ! earnestness from millions of reiemseenited souls, ' it seems proper to notice thocoincidenee ordains, and to glance at the relation ofthe Temperance I cause to the Church, and to inquire what mat he Pheduty in this particular juncture, as officers and merriberaoe a branch of Cbris's church,' always among, the insist induentiel, but now " assuming a positiup of ethinence and : responsi- . bility before the public, more exalted than O'er. 4ktsides, the fitictuationsein the history of .the perance refotenatien have been so great and so far from encouraging that just at thief , time there has arisen ithtbe minds of thegreat mass of persons favorable to the reform, the convic t on that permanentsucceee and a final ttiumiiii o its principles must, he looked for' from. the a tiiie co- operationlef the chureh of Christ alone Outside organizations, Washingtonian' tuovel , nients, pledges, people' s meetings,. restrietly legislation, the examples of public men, the dis tribittion of an apprepriate l I teratureeseeretbi2n eficial 'societies heye had their place, and liovir dorsi their work .with greater or less . elliciener Old most of them atilt-remain among the acered- Heil ageheies of the reform: IT It none of them, nor 341 of them together, have beep found able, 'alter a generation of experiment, • to achieve the work for which the) were put in eperatien.llori than'ten years ago temperance men aeknowledg 'ad themselves to !hive euffered a "Waterloo de foie," and since the time of that a erancc, es= pecially.during the war the state of thinge.be !cenie oven worse, aruhnow • although wo have urepthationably made ! -up 'aware efthe , lost_ ground, have rectivetred'• from the panic which we now see to heye been rather discreditable, have infused financial terength iete our nation al' u.bliehing operatioes,- and are resuming our e aat thorough legislative reform; and have nation al' used the cordial:and zeelosal eo,operation.er silent example of men in the highest political' and Military positithie ! in the and. nation ; yettliqovil of intempeinnee is still so :monstrous and So rampant ; the reaction from tile - earlier p adYanee or is still so, marked even in•respectable society; the work to. be done is So vast, flat the Minds of men are turning in, a kind of despair in that direction for means of successfully carrying on the temperance reform. 'rho appeal is made with unusual emphasis to the claurch. Moro plainly-than 'ever, it is felt that the 'fate of, the teniperance,reforin hi to be 'decided 'here. „The great ad vooaies'of the inoe-e -ment lc nock at her door and wait in her courts to Imre the doont of their cause. • ''.. .:- ''' °That irliiiii is • ereoke . .l cannot- be made stthigla; that which is Wanting cannot •belnum bored." ,Coarse iniiiial appetite hawked by cov etousness, and platd upon. by. gambling- poll ticians•is- too strong for them ; they 'Stint' to that kingdom which is pot meat. and drink but righteimsnese and peere. and joy in the ifoly (awe; they look to the society founded by-the • 'World's Rodbell-, who makes all things new;. they teeoenize i the ,church. these spiritual and supernatura powers, by the side of wheel their pledges and orderseansYdegrees mid inya tericei arc the mere elap-trup of nature's lour neYinen,,nine hundred and ninety-nine of whom cannot. Make or remake a man. lido: Henry Willson in A recent .newspaper article speaking of ttheimportance 'of enlisting the American people more generally in' th , temperance Amuse, says: " Can itbe donee If so, how? In my judg thent theta is but en° way iii which this great result Cori be reached.' TM; Cu UJICIT MOsT TWEE PP TIT E r 3AATTER. ,It . ;intist become ohs nt the Being leeues of the Moral warfare in- which it is engaged "• We belieye this appeal is fairly ta ken. 'We believe the specific work and objects of the temperence: reform may.7be 'reckoned as among the legitiniste'concerns of the church in our day.. We believa that there is a respells), Linty !meting upan the-church' for the success of the temperance. eatime, which has 'been but partially met. ,We believe that the failure in • carrying any'great riffled . retbrin points With , rally . tO the great instrumentality for nian'e good 'ln the earth ;, and the appeal of oleo in dee - eeair of other Means to the church is not More a compliment thasta serious charge of derelie tion, in the actual Performance of its duty i and while His clear, that in every stage of. the Tem perantie rnovemeet, the ministry, memberi, and newspaper organs of., the church have been its moat ernelent allies, and that at. alt . times the 'cause has depended upon, these Tor whatever measure of success it has enjoyed, 'nevertheless, we believe, the church is disposed. at ; this, time to reconsider the whole. question ; to take en larged ',views of 'her own responsibilities; to acknowledge frankly her ehortcominge ; te gird herself anew for the work.and thus to respond to the :appeal on .this critical period ,of the &theca; s - ! ! - - • i '.' ' ' ' In arguing therefore; that the:_ church should Maintain and • advance Upon her present posi= Hein on temperance' reekoningitnaorepoeitivelt . ambng ' the .objecte' other stated and . regular 'activity, end not contenting herself erithjudi, cis', deliverances or with .occasional.sernions, ~ I : maitain : ." ' • First; that the ground of the Tempethnee Reform 'le that of the plain requirements of • Scripture. It is not bused upon results, of the' i higheatinerely human 'wisdom. Its roots are not in the vagneitspiratione of the unrenewed heart. It does notbelong to the brood of ideas gerierwe' ted in the brains of Mere philosophy and social philanthropists, such as communism, abolition of 'capital punishment and woman ,auffrage. It Is a thoroughly Christian and Reriptural idea. The ground' has long .ago been :cleared Of this apprehension in the view of-intelligent believers. Vie do not test the temperance, reforth on such argument., as are ascribed to it. by one of !the highest, literary. authorities in the, country, ( A.ppletores Cy elopedisi.) • "The demand for Oro-. hibition,, aceordipg to its advocates, logically rests on the' assumetkin that alcohol is eseen-. tially poison-precisely as arsenic, Opium, and nicotine! are poisons-that the difference 'km tweon wine and braedy, beer andgin, hi one of degree, nitcrely;' not et, kind, at least so far! as poison is concerned., . They . also -argue in• kip port of their •ettOitions thet! alechells a product • of vegetable deem,-and dissolution, and hence . necessarily hurtful; ;that there can be no tern-. perato rise of it as a beverage any mole than there can be temperate 'theft, adultery or. retir der ; that if much strong drink does great, harm a little wetikalcohol drink must do some harm, and that there can belie lei:neer:4e use cif stich beverages but their total disusee,' That some temperanee men /regard these ex trete° _pesitions as', fundameritat, wceSdo not •thiestion. Nor do We Bete intend to depy their/ correctness ; we only expreekthir strong dony. whotherehey can be mandalned from the w rd Of .God`. wills such clearness, as, to put em, ) 2! among the axioms of 'Christian duty 'The Christian 'church niay-not eommit he _ elf ;es) thorn aii 'established guides of her coed et ; aleo hol may or may not . be a peison. I t is, then the unquestionably beneecial use o poisons; in 74 'small quantities he medicines, 7 d somewhat break Wit force of the argument' 'or total absti nence (minded upon that posit n. „Wo'canhot • take the.extreme position the the, use of , all in toxicating drinks asbeve. , would.he under . 41 circumstan c es, and a utely, a sire; or that the Scrieturse anywhere' bsolutely. condemns all such use. of them 41 a tans or anywhere. enjoins ! total alastin ee frein • intoxicating : drinks asa duty i we. de, not hold !' it, evennecessary prove' that the Bible. nowhere allows- he fuse of . strong ', drink as a beverage:: We do net think it India pensable to ab ,as his not antra:wends - been attempted, t t the sere of in the Bible whi , eem to approve o • the, use'et Wine, do• not appe of, It. :There is more or less, of s.whio we Might call exegetical finesse in ,thee 'interpretations. - !Theyanay he oerreee, tittt we. cannot' afford' to pet the whole 'stress •of Our ca upon them. Without doubt, the -weight. of "the specific .pass.lgese ! of Beriptureen the sula.. ! Jett is enormously on the side °Hotel ahetinenee.. And a careful and I scholarly inquiry may )4 et make it Clear that 4 ihete is not a single passage in the Bible that contains an explidt- approba tion of intoxicating trine." ' (Ritchie;,Scripture Testimony, page 1564 ;But there is' no need'of i waiting: for a final settlement of this point: riot ' a ,whit more than" in getting a Scripture! position'' against slavery, polygamy, or-the dancing and .worldly amusements of modern.society. _. i ''. ' I • The srgument that-fetiches the . rock - of duty, and that remains immovable, Whatever bee-limes of-the others,' is the gMnd and. Most Christi-Om principle of .elf-sacrifice for the' good of Or oseightsmi, the law - of chriethui :charity to the weak' . It is Christ-hilt to rush; to sod eW, Inn state of - great mewed niceonitY. Paul r tW - grest. eascdsti Of the nevi dispensation, has announced the principle in the , fourteenth of Uomans: "It is good neither to est flesh nor Vi-drink wine, nor anything- whereby thy brti.- thee. stutabletb or is otifended, :otter-de weak;" and again in 1 tor. 41:.V.Meat Make my brother - to 'Ol7-OWI will essik no dealr'while. the world' Manilas; mat I make My brother to offend." , ,• ! The Ampliettient or rulelo the 'evil of in I temporalness is - perfectly - catty and'.universal:' l .Thoole who question or:deny eyery other posii Lion taken tryAemperatsie• men, must:feel the kiniSof this. Altiohol not biepolsoM . Any nee. of:' alcoholles altmay or may 'not: .be stabs :. But the Moo one avils dowtriglicion theittuartir sidstise irati among- the "ever'-day, ficts of Our life. The *rankness of the mast et men Amide: the appetite thr stroncdrink, is st settleolphysiologiesil principle...No matter, ac- . , , eorablit to Task bow estrous we libel ourselves team and no mitt*, how silly and weak Mir: . knottier may appeseln nur eyes, we 'are bound'. kor spampWit sake to deny ourselseoi of nett as ' wells. think, "sitar the world standetb.," he pease telior allt,responilltilUty Am the'reill and olastnuaritrof f ogelnether sad teo prbrevSte his . Weilere OS absrailirad'spirttend heinoi. '' In OW ewe mentkersed by !Paul, the offenets triode front snuertolikieSmernie.on and in ems'- t 2 90 20 47 48 012 90 '2O 87 10 V 7 02 VI 12 nos 48 00 173 76 11502' 3000 6000 - 280 98 821 M 85 48 MI 110 44 119 II 11 84 24 00 195 00 1 23 IS . 172181 .• 11860 '; . 71164' 10 10180 M 00 4(C. 93 . 320 31 .4- 371 20 111578 93 70 70 40 "SOlO 16680 =I MINN sensitive conscience. Eating Meat 'offered - to' kiehe was altogether is mattalliwittined able; But leete wiliei brother attould belodeven Into ouch a sin, Peril enjoined ithstinencelkomettie prim.- tree or cat!rtg ntoat *Owed to kiolis, on the - part -of those whe lino hitneelf Mid that an idol II nothing in the world:. But hero is danger, of a sinful excess of theesorst sort. We ere asked tee practise and' proclaim the Pauline principle, oil, total abstinence, not tasave a Mee th eee as he proposed„ from-the evil results of a COMM, but to- ieecuc him from hie doWnward path to a die houcst' lira grate of .infamy and' a dreadful 0 hell ; to tie 1 •rt the gootivef dtunkennes e s Cram a rising gen ration ; to bind up ' innumerable wounds and !Anises and petrcfying sores of the body retitle, and to uphold the dominion of Ma seeetrid of truthln thechnrch end the World. The . Bible itidcedecoutains no explicit rule of 'total 'atietinence, amply beer tee n» laW of _charity is far wider than that laid down by the advocates of temperance eh - inc. -1 •We must sustain from cliceleteeng that: can 'give eerions -Offense. We must array the.whole force of our, example in the support of our weak and tempted brother; we must enter upon genre-long course of selie denial, i eliecessary to his siebstantial interests. Do not jeopardize ate• souls for whom Clean died, for the sake of aeittle tit:klieg of the iod ate, or glow of the nerves. If wo are not, in so many words, commanded to organise total ahe stinence societiesend to establish the principle. of tetalateetinence Mamie! abd church life, we certainly have a Scrintieral charter co coring the 1 whole ground on werteli such movements stand. Anti we May'rightly bold that the total 'abets-' nettle movement of Modern Renee is as truly a legitirdato outgrowth of Christianitt l , the Movement for the abolition ofelavery, 'imbue with Clarkson and Wilberforce, and e nding . in the proclamation of the Fifteenth Amendment to the Ciiiestitution of the United States, although no such phrase as" human rights" is found from - one end to the other of the Bible. • There is an Objection tolhe direct and active interest teethe church, as such, in the temper ance movement, which atilt. has weight with not a few. , It is supposed to Conflict with the spirit ual character and object of the church. 'We aim it is argued, at the conyention of men; at' the implanting of a wholly now principle of living through the. power of the Holy Spirit. The tem perance reform and indeed moral reform bison-, oral, treats only of specific sins, which are but symptatissof the-real malady. Why distract the church in denting with the malady itself by•youe quacked about the symetoms? Do you not say that if you,ence truly convert the man you have morally' reformed him, and that conversion is the only reat_and lastingenoral reform after all? We answer that while the church on earth in its supreme and-final Objects is certainly spirit ual fri its character, it is notand cannot be a pure ly spiritual instieution. , It is 'partly hutuan, pert-' ly- diving. • 'life fere:an as he is mind and Ixely; belonging to time and to eternity. Ills adapte d to the facts er• tiien's condition as a sinner, and as suffering , for his sins. It contemplates sin as an evil and a curse, as wollas a crime. It pours • out its God-like sympathies and blessings on the sintering men and societies, whom it does not sp . ecitically labor to •coriverte - Surely it is safe toe the church to mould its policy in accor dance with the• example of its Divine Master. And how large a part of his recorded . ectivity Was directed to the alleviating of woes of man kind. • llow be confronted sin as an evil with: the majesty -of his miracle working power, often without even as much as hinting at shier higher tiellingas the physician of the soul. And the prophetic description of the last judgment; . with the son of man sitting on the throne of his' geezer, shows in . a remarkable manner' bow closely he will hold his people accountable f,or , a failure to carry ot his own beneficentpolley to a suffering world. • And the church has never failed to 'recognize her duty of charity to the poor and suffering. -It has notheen held-to be enough even Maher eldets and deacons should. dispense' ; the charitable constitutions of the ,Inenibers. • Organizatione • must be formed" within - and about the churches more effectually. to Meet these specitic wants, and no one has - found fault with them as inconsistenwith the_ spiritual' aims or iettered. complete ess." and sufliciener of the cher,cle, for all its 1 "timate What is the di ff erence in pri ciple work. gi be tween making a sewing society for te part of-the regular. work of the church, arid, establishing a weekly church temperance meet- 1 erg? It' either or the two is shallow and re mote from the profound Idea of the church, it must be the alert for the relief of the poor; for the temperance movement strikes at the root of-three-fourths of "the poverty to which year Doroleseeieties are 'but salves and'poultioes that inest be renewed every season at least. In fact, direct relief is the least satisfactory of all' char ity to the poor. It eseoftee .waste and mischief eumbined,—money worse than thrown away.— Tirue relief-to an individual and a neighbors hind, is to raise their character, to ' remove their bad 'llebits, to put them in the way of val ui ig and diligently using their opportunities Of Gaining rieiving. And airmen the highest mope' iiestation or the benevolent spirit of tho Master towards the poor which the ehurch hi our day can give, is to engage in active efforts to 'pro mote the temperance reform. • e e - But it et asked, why should the church make a 'ltalie:Oen among the evils and sins df'the 1 times ? Are there reet others abroad in the, land equally demanding her zeal ?' Arc nut corrup tion mad fraud • preeticed on a gigantic scare, ' making a mockeree of legislation and convert ing business of almost every kind into more genii:lino? Are not our' leaks and Goulds epelsoning tiorvery fountains of baseness mor ale in the metropolis' of our country t"—(Spald -dingel Tract Rational Tempenmee)—and Have not legislators almost ceased to blush at the im putations of bribery, er' to deem it longer necessary toehide • the hand that receives the price of cheer influence?,e . We answer, that the sin and' evil - of fraud and eorruption are too • clear to need special denunciation. They are against the plainest statutes and- letter-of the moral code. The position of the church in re-' gore to them has never been doubtful. Her :testimony is explicit and unwavering. - There is no miesticeerif Christian -expediency, here.— It is one of radical and open violation of known fundaneontal law. Beside,s, the sin and its re- i eults, 'Although enormous ; are comparatively , subtle ;.they cannot easily be attended by t tl z ilri I clash oe-, ersonal efforts which we , tenders d ;by nko reform. But intemperance is qui ly i. fullew by such .a train of gross evile ; i sso destructive of reason, so cripplingeo t right exercise of the , faculties in the daily silk of life ;it so ravages the bodily system, altering the nerves; draining the vital fo, arresting tine s e natural processearid etposin the System to every form of disease and o „premature • and disgraceful death.; it so robe man of the re spect of himself'. and neigh ;it so quickly hurls him into .poverty and', egrao; - it opens the pores of his moral syste se widely to every kind of criminaleolleital •; it gives hint such e preininentes—almost a onopoly. of our po lice criminal courts, risonsiegallows, peer houses end lunatic as urns; it makes,him but a vast charge uponee r pockets in the ship° of • taxes': ietnakes le ei the centre of such a pesti lent'', law-defyin g Sabbath-breaking traffic- , it / bands him and el associates and landlords into such* power I and daigerous element in poi- 1 lticsetliat it become THE torso of our time,. the demon. at is to be cast lent of modern soci ety. An the •chuech which Sees her ' relations to bribe - and fraud in the light of the Eighth Comalament, must towhee doter towards in temp' ranee in the light of the law of charity, wie h covers ill the coMniandments in the tee; Able of the lawe .1n a word, it,is th e nee of ta verage which narcotizes - the moral- sensibell and the: intellect, and which stimulates the sensual brute nature, of 'maim, which dislodges hint for the time being, from his position 'as made a little lower than , the angels, which re- moves and defaces the in of -God in his soul • and turns the temple of the Moly Ghost into s lodging,place Of demons en leeteM enemy put into the mouth welch- steals' away brain -and heart alike, that we may. well, eurritnen 'the, church of our day to aid In overthrowing, by special means and activities: We -challenge every other specific form of vicious indulgence. . or openly wrong practice, or aeieese, ibleeeil that afflicts the childrep of men, to match such . a re; conies the following; "The annualamortnt of fermented- and distilled liquors used in the United States e would fill a canal four feet deep, fourteen feet wide and , one hundred and twenty mileilong. The plaeosevhereintoxicating drink.* are made and sold in this 'country, if placed in direet lines, would make a street one hundred Miles long. Ifall, the victims of the rum traf - tic were gathered before our eyes, weshould see a thousand funerals a day from their number. fThink of two-thirds of the City of Philadelphia urnishing onetheteetuadfuneralsadeyie Placed in .a procession five -abreastetbe drunkards of Americo Would form an army one, hundred mites long, with a suicide occurring in every' , mile. Every hour in the night the heavens are lighted with the incendiaert-orehof the-deunk aid- Every hour in the day the earth is stained ;wit/elite blood of drunken aasassitis. Seethe . - groat American army of inebriatei, more than. half a million strong . , marching on to sure and swift destruction, - ing off vapidly into the poor-houses' and prisons and up to the scaffold, and yet the ranks are constantly.recrulted from the underlies drinkers:. Whoeten compute, the fortunes 'squandered; the hopes [rushed; the hearts awoken.; the homes Mode desolate ley drunkenness ! " ' If again it be objected;, that to tal abstinenceand prohibition tire extreme Mea sures; that the temperance ',fibs Bible ht mod •erhtion ,not at attrition; -that the-misuse of an object` is no good ground for Setting it-aside altogether; that the Christian isone, who of all others has a right . to rational enjoyment, and ' ease' setteet Divine aid in the moderate nee of everYgood ; in fineethat true reform, byDitine grace, should make a rush capable of Manly self-control, and that little or nothing is gained . for the character by abstaining freak that which i . Man ought rather to be sole to use in Modem-, tine, we can only answer by pointing to figs„-: Mederation haze Leen tried long,ago and found waiting. The_ lamination of strong . drink Is . too great ; the - physiological 'effects of alcohol in creating a morbid thlrstandl owing: fhri ons and insatiable as IL wild - beast, are toa well ascertained. ":Whatever. may Jaye- been: the meet he Bible Lands and eras, whatever ,maybe 'the casein other countries to;•day, in America thdelownWard way of the drinker from =oder alien to excess is too . at rep slippery, to al low the trining of moderato indtdgeffee, Ulu a whirlpools wide's draws In swift and' &ward- Sweewfrom the outermost. side' to the central abyar. - !•Theraleobolio drinks or"oue day are so far frony being the ftertwin 4 it 4 het t laPesee t : t ...l asodnetor :Mb e grain antifruits. they well have come. from -the caldron. bf = " 'beth's witches. .."Deaeon Gliese,lrlatilierr was, it -place. and" the scene of an' bon— ed treat; compared ..frith .thee. enorthitles of fraud, adulteration. and Isdaonizig"'neir goiOg on under amnion. of the liquor Irriranttrettrre. even amongn vineyards of Oieleernis and Ohdoe as:Well-as in -oelians bidden . under:coffin warehouses in Brooklyn. A worse sort cif deyz ils than thew whirthwrete "Death and Damns = tion" upon :the drinks 4t hwty Year* ago) are employed in Producing the horrid mixtures of today, which and - their.wayto our sick ehamb-.. era an d epreiel their unwholesome Rnes:. 'synod bur communion tables. Do •na talk of. moderation in thense of these ,tile 'compounds t give nit a weak tincture , of arsenic at once end, call it. bY its right -*name of poison., into the; question'Of a mederato use of a possible pure 'aleeholle drink. we cannot now . enter. ; fit is not betbre us... :Erich an article can hardly be said to hive an ascertainable existence. As well • attempt to• argue ,about the propriety _of .a *Qhriatlan attending in' ruoderatiel upon pure • dramatie or operatic. represent: M a ns; such -things do uot exist in itnydegree ~-tutilefatit to become - areal element in at qdeStion of duty,: and if they did; if pure liquors. and draniatle entertainments were alt--appreciable item,of traffie and commodities, they are so sure to, be comethe snare rind ru in of others, that even' granting ourselyea to be entirelyclearof - peril, -it Is oar, Christian .duty,'• under the principles alrgady referred to as-laid down by Pauli- to turn ouribeekis" upon - theatre going- and wind drinking; And to set the whole (erect .of-our ,ex ample as total 'abstainers upon Qhristian win dpipe, against spelt perilous- pra ctices. And if tile-objector pe' mists in-saying: there aro terri -blelexceaseir and _frauds in- business,. there is endless corruption in polities and logoilaticin•;. •tlieke arc wrongs of.the sorest kind in the fam ily relation—following in the line of total ab s:ncriceundprehliiitioii, we ruut abolish busi ness, shut tip, our legislative bails,' and break, up the relations.; we answer, the cases, whoili,different spheres and not amena ble to tile same laws cif.procednri. Show us that Wee nnk aiiiperive with business, law and the family sis readily tia with a merA-ntatter of in dulgenee. Put, if you can, thr fundamental, indispensable arrangements of society upon the, mime footing with just one of the thousand ways in Which vre:may gratify appetite. and swhieli if denied would leave nine hundred and ninet y ninci others open to ea. -Rank-the use of into* dating drinks aa in dignity and importance corn-, Nimble with besiness,witl law and With the fain tly institution; awl you mayswell iniagine: that youjuive poit a Wriier in the way of church ac tion;for • its abolition, and raised a great argil-. meat for the effort simply to correct lie Tho argument is too idle, not to may wicked, to bg put into Faulk, Yet we feel...that there aro those in and out of the church, acting or re fusinglo ad, with a secret feelinelhat total ab etitiertek snd prohibition belong. to revolution ary measures, and_perhaps intim ministry there are those who wohlil hold bark tht church from the charitable Pauline poliev of total abstinence, pretty much as they would hold it back from ari assault on the social structure. itself, to , rid it of its abuses. What. an iimaring, utiwairtuitable, unseriptural'exaggemtion of the value of asin gle aniniallndislgence 'capacity of en joynient through strong drink, is to be reckoned among the 'sacred priviligeilof his being which the Church dare notinioidel: • . 44st the rever.ao of all this is'otir view of the Case. In issuing .her. rule 'of total abstinence, the ehurchwould be acting in that well rccog-. nized - sphere 43f inOrals.contprcheniled in keep ing the batty under. It i-in.this very region of appetite and indulgence thatthe Christian's first opportunities .of self-denial and' eross-bearing are found.'So far froitrappetite and habit being priVileged, we-know that they are the strong holds of self and sin; and Oa monattcani, Soul:. • destroying- and tneVitable abuse .is connected with some tiveiappetite which can show noapevial reason for indulgenee, save the very miiversal ity thatmakes itso-terrible, is.not that just the vet* spot on Which to lay the cruaa of apsolute self-denial?• Against that, shoulOot the elmreh feel speehdlysummpned to directits most ener getic and radietil opposition Do not Christian integrityand'fidelity requirethechureh to take the ground of total abiditlence, ligait4st So world ly, do Seiffslp . Sci carnal,-so' perilous. acoUrse to oneself and otheri,-astheltsc,of alcoholic drinks iu any degroe,or iiirm? - •-•-•iNtay,she not arm her self with, the - words' of inspiration and cry "Loott•not thou - upon the•wine when jt.1.4 when it giVetit him' color-in the cup, when it: inoveth itself aright, .Ati the last, it biieth liko serpent and stingeth like artarlder:' • " . To giVe a more practical tu rp to our discourse, let ns for a few.morountl inquire what there that the' church can do, more pairticularly at the PrOent juncture,', to-promote the temperance reformaticrn: - Not forgetting the great service it has al ready rendered; lay - sermons and addresses from the. pulpii,and by the'real of .innuy of, its members, andatot•doubting'foir a moment that the degreetti Which the principle of total absti nence has gained'a lodgment in. the moral 'coll.:, victions of the community is aitnost wholly dud the churelr• - brolight • - , ~...... cue .pic ~, ,_, _le iCOmmunity ':to 'a policy of total abstinence, be recognized as. regular parts of Church work. My hearers are aware that this plan. has been thoroughly tested .in - some quarters of our .chliral..partiOnlarlylin the largest church eon nerted with ohr, body,"and the largest Presby terian Church Ain America, that of-Laf ay ette Avenne, Brooklyn, 'Roy. 'Dr. etkcler,l pastor. Of this. Pr.' C., Writes - in' a recentzfiewspaper , article:, . ' - • ' ~. -../ '°: ' .. ", • "In this church ("Lafaketie :svenne;' Brooklyn,) we hare had for several years a' prottperous.society, Which bias fully recognized/1)y ttie. church as Is Its Sabbath school., It noinbers several hundreds. 'of member., and affltticted with .1t it 'Band of Hope' among thetabbatliscliooi thildren., It has= wviry simple constitutlon and by.lairs; a zealOpi Keil dent and: secretary', a tieruurrer; and a dozen 'aera tors of an - executive committee. .The only title Co membership is asighature of ihe total abstinence • pledge: Public .ineetingi :are held "during the fall slid winter In„the'clitirch; and :attractive enitii,e is Mira) . * proylded. , Vast audiences .havo been ad dressed by such Men salts. Beecher ; Newman. Hal), Mr. dreeley, Gkii , . Bucklughanc,Draohn Hall, Wni. E, Dodge, Mr. Hough, slir..Barnuni, Dr. Jewettilind many other powerfuladfrocdtesof the reform., The •einenses are -met by, a public collection at each meeting; tind,..witl'the exception' of lir, Googh's lectures, tickets are never sold at the door. At the :close iii; each meeting the pledge it circulated. This is a of uif feettira In:aii•etrective.temperance work.'', Ono of. the beat_ appointed churehes in the- Fourth Presbytery, (Buttonw.xidSt., Dr. Shep-- - perd'it,) has carried. en a giddier movement, with 1 entire, success for eighteen- months pact; having secured a thousainisigners to the pledge, in the first -twelve :months,. including -some mese, affecting . instances . of. reformation: At the meeting last Week,: April 8, although the pastor and the older with manage the •ineetingar were , both, • for the seeped time - absent: from sickness, the lecture roars was full; the 'services. were deeply interestingi. and:a dozen orpore new Signatures to the .pledge' were obtained.; Other chureheiiiii our. own; and.,other denomi:: .nations, are engag.ool in the work „on the same' general plan, and - the • resalte thus far warrant., us in predietingthe most extensive overturn-.., • lag that inteinpeouiceand the rum truffle have:. experiened slacetbe,carly days of the reforrna-. tion, es a' result of the general adoptions.of-such 'a line of - policy bythe great body of the Evan- - gelleal 'churches. - .2., The -church "-might 'corably clear its' 7it i position and -stO 4 ngthen .i fluencet i On 'the subject: by banishing 1 tn. a communion table the wretched' article of Comnierce culled wine ; 'andbideed bv refu4gi to'. employ any- . thing bu t the pure anternien juice of the grape at that most solution service: It cannot be doubted that there are real perils to :not a slew persons : connected With. any - use of alcoholic '_ drinks, any andeirerywhere, Including the Lents table. Cases baveoccured, and are ocouring of re formed drinkers; whose - appetite. still lingers like 01; chained, but 'ehalliiz -wild beast, which the first taate*- inity'seti free in all its original wildness,arid who_ ditrelscarcely smell. the cup ''as it. passer: We cannoj see how,any church, ' thoroughly wedged to the temperance reform, can *maniac to: subject:theta to tldeordeal, or keep them away frilm the etirnmnialon table. And if it is urged that our Saviour must have used a -fermented article .at the- itaititution of the Euelaarist, we reply, that in: using - leavened. bread, the modern church hie for. mere conve nience,'departed from the precise - form. Of the [ orienal: ordinance ; why; then, for en object of far higher lin ce;,.refuse to- stake aubther change as Li e affecting the essence 'otthe oh -servant* al In:Mei other ease? She does not hesitateto introduce leaveninto the bread ;Why may she not witlidraw2 the samePrincifile from the wino? . But, Anther; we think it quite un likely that there' Was any fermented principle in either of the articles Used by our Saviour at Lard's Supper. Abet Supper is foinaded on: the Jeivish Passover, and the religion* and rigid exeittaion 'of ferment; from the breed - used on - hat OCCOSIOn, would naturally be,extialded to . ( 1h e wine, When that; in mimes of time eamelet , ,; be added to the feast. It' Was,. we should sup pose; _pig as improper to use leaven ”the syrn- . , bol of correptien ' ill drink *a in food., (Thayer). ; i • At all. mete,. the aliment. universal vtuttosu of ; modern :emcee we reed, (Thayer) IS toexclude fermerited wine from their celobratiOn - °Vibe Passover. :And, in'the Words of institution or, the Lord's Supper, it iiiitoticeable that • Vne"..] does not occur. The itroxdy eup" . appears. in its place, and ourtisvimir p tweak* not at wine, but of drinkir*, the fruit of the vine,. new in - his •Fatheete gthjelettie. - The unfer mezesi=ice of the grape . might Well enough be, 4 by this getteratiangitens, There is no ng, then, twthettoltdretugettoof the origi nal'instituilon mkt& would-oblige the., moat . rigid ,litendist.to mak:fermented liquoi Ad the .. _ ... . . '-,.il'.‘:=l:s.6,i...F.::'cipTlF.:'spc:}C.,STS. Lord's Supper; why then make , that blessed - ordinance . - upossible occasiott of stumbling to any, which aught to be one ofthe.hightst edi:. • fication.. In the strongitutguamof Dr: I:4l,lltield t,. "Shall the cup of sal lion :becornit'the efip , of damnation—shall, the cup of the Lord be made • - Identical:with that Of 'ilevlist:UnillUte church guards effeetusillyaOhist theposalbility of such • a profi.nation, she finis in a.:ruotiCCOrtapieuous manner . give her' whole Intl tieueittyponthe side -, of teraperatice. ' Finally; the whole churctief Chrifit . ahOlthl txt - recognized as a solid pir*lgeillibilragainst,•the use of all that intexicides. rifle alontrisihet One - inimartal ordorfor the rederoptionof trhaffi - stail and body. WhYshouldtbe hold a lower Marg. position than the htnuan .Ortierstu r enod hert• • She ought to point to wan standing on the slip— pert' places of appetite,-the trus'path of.entire self dental. Crucified herself to the lusts of the flesh, purified .fiem 'carnal and worldly.cern-, pliatice, with the light - of. a saintly heroism on her brow, she shiinld'stretch forth her hand resent). the perishing: ...31. - 4.th , a weary.sense 'of • the inotliciency of all merely human - nietintrof staying the misery, the woe, thq wiefehedurt - , - the Leaven-daring crane, and the frightfurwasto. of intemperance, the orders: and" societies and public men and, presti of the land are turning, to.the church. With her is the ;residue of the Spirit. The ilreadful hardness Of men's - hearts, the immeasurablepower. ef.thsir 'appetites, the . ;cruel tyranny bf-custom, the iretatiahleuess and unscrupuloietness ...of, avarice haVe defied all le.iser'assaults. , The monster hi! . abroial again, with sluilf a million yearlylifictima in our own - country alone, in tits train. , Thetteciiried tier- ••. fie is thriving, melting the - hard earnings of the poor, with a 'lava stream of desolation. The fcinnilations.: of our politierd life AM honey combed, by the sottisluietis of a hirirepsit of our wire-pulling and office-seeking politicians, wire control tl situation. 4 - 4iwttregplating the trot . - fie are defied!". Wemeriare not Merely claiming titan's right to vote, Initexereising what hereto "fore luis been menus privilege to drink • to inc. - brioty away from home, .The- , Very structure .7)t - spele s t3i-tiembles. The - churX God's elibScn ' instrument for man's regtlicrution L niust take order:to - meet the emergency. 4he ii,colue to the kingdom for such a - time.asthis. ...Woennto her, if help arises from :mother lquarter and' If the unbelieving world - ean strengthen. itself ,In the ° opinion that man can get -rid' of his r worst" evils, in spite of the-Millilitre:lee or ope-toppo silioirtaf-a blind and conservative chart-qt.. On pie contrary, we - believe that all tihristian grace wilt 13[3. ; all" Christian Co wilr - he animated,joyful and effective, and all oonvert— ing influences will be granWl In those churches which throw this with generous enthusi: asm into this wide - and needy field of Christian eflbrt.. • _ • - • • A.• ";%7 N A DIM INA)); —hiss Anna. .E. _L - A_ : bickinsen, after heilcre In Dayton,. - on tridayevening week, made a visit to the, „. Naltitud Soldiers': Home, attSat4Fday titorih ingl , Vaving been requested..ro jmake an ad.": (tragic to the.. veterans. - ,.The Dayton- DAILY' • JciurtNAL gives tife following interesting ac count of, her visit ; • • , • . . r. • Those who heard. Anna Dickinson at Hus ton Hall, Friday' night., -cold;'Sharli,. caustic and bitter—and those who. heard her at the :Soldiers' Home; on Stittirdayinerning,• covered two different Persons: S4e cattle up:` • ' on the stage,- Sat arday rnorni eharaeprigt-. • rjeupy-:.-codt, ECIf-ppsset*l'd, and as rnanly.'as - you could imagine—had . asidi: her hilt-and • * gloves with perfect imperturbability--Itnd then she had a -trial. Something "less than a thousand 'One-legged, One-arinet4 and erwise mutilated veteran :soldiers.soat befere„ • her.' - Anna had seen many Sikh' -when-they were suflbrinacfrem fresh wonntis. and• des- . • perate camp sicknem, during , the war, ami .had done 'a gOott-, woman 's ,part in alleviat ing their sufferings. She had wept 11l camp, soothed them in sorrow, eriedp‘•er:theit-tor tures, and sympathized With and comforted them as a sister would. But she had seen . • nothing -like this war picture. When slit turned to the veterans, the holepatioraina of war presented 'itself ,W f to -her vis.6M. Her -beautiful eyes-tilled with tears, Which idlo . tried in vain to fling away with her *bite, jewelecilinprs,• and then, after •a. half sub: I knew when-I,was-asked-thata-couldn7t- •talk-to-you, but---e an cry with- you Hiatt • been inep acting, it wouldliaVa-becn,per._,. ect, hut every body saw howtriv,woriirmlY it. wag, and,-.-it was the best thing. that . • has liiitpened in that way at'. `the SOI- . dierS' ome: It • - made, other. people net tised to Mei melting mood, whip out their handkerchiefs. Tile women iktly audience • cried like . women, and flie• ruin—fell 'very • much in love with Anna. Afterthis perfc4- haPpS•*episode Anna. wils 'herself again. • :Eloquence flowed as freel-frOni her h •arm _ . • ing lipsAs.water . from - Horeb when the -rod' _ of inspiration opened the rcrek. 1 She remind- . • ed the gallant men bc , foreheroftliestruggles find trials of their .warfare; • of the cause: • f- hieh -enlistej their - services ;' of •the 'prinet ples far - which they bled; of the honors-they. had-won ;'of Ile : gratitude to' which theY Were entitled, ind °laic love theY eenatuand- ed from 'goof women -and good men: - Full 4 of Pwsionate•carne"stness, shelled the .Veter- • ans, at one Illoment, roaring with the mighty .. voices of soldiers. in Nietory, Then weeping .like women. The hepue was hard to describe, though. delightful witness and to feel. • Anna, as the r1•omo/6 surpassed lair she! Band - ever accomplished • as, the advoCate cif the • cause which has 'changed her eloquence fbr - sp many years. '4N o i hody epuh-i ' :describe the. '' enthusiasm of thdvtterans. 'Bier visit' tat& veterans - will long Le Theiished Unlit a..delightful episode. ' . • . -After an address of-an hour,„ •tshe enjoyed • the hospitalities of COI. Brawn; and thenNiS- ited all the del*rtmen ts of the hine,--linger- • ing Most lovingly in Oe heSpitels,where jbe sweet attentions ofwoinan are so full of bleing Ss tasuffering:soldie . - l'eo:c. the, drowing.rOom tabli or a lady Of rank in London ' a lady of high. , positiOn , and. Irreproachable Cliaructer-7-may be seen, . beneath a glass case, a lovely; dimpled little' foot, delicate ankle, and rounded calf, up to', the knee-joigt.• .lt is a cast of the leg Of . Lady , the • hos s ieSs. lit SOL% .sqttate there is a sinati, rather • humble-l49king shoPi. in *Welt you can _purehaSe, for five shill- ings, a (Ina of One`of 'the most exquisite of. • legs. The origittal (ilithe" fleso belongs 'to. Lady —deli-,4f-, anti 11..--- ; who went to -. . this little shotOqeog., and had her perfect leg moulded,:atid:afterwards generously gave :theAloPmart. thq privilege-of selling copies of the east; :which. he does daily, for it was -. quickly discovered to whom the hgautetins. " leg belonged. One lady-the wifebf a may, : • or of is town the provinces-came:to Lott dciriand-14 ,two casts taken of her leg; ono nude, and o • ".with the neat little shoe, stock .in g 'find garte - Strange tosay-theugh•no ar; tist will call :1 strange-the leg with the . stcieking. and rter- produced ,' an -- ,effect much further. ren`.tved from modesty-thah theleg quite uric . - l3nweiani„ the" :• Mier- brated cast,vemierlin Covent Clarden . ; • driveS ' 'quite a brisk trade in casting ladies' legs,q -' and . haS any--quantity of models 'Of all'desl: - • criptions,- takeh from life, and, chiefly fivni-'. noble life,,to - riale. How this leg mania or Aginatcd we have - not heard, but there is cur= cer tes some - eiolaination for this sudden pastime ion:anoing the aristotratic 'fair tdhaVe their legs recogniZed. , Perhaps it is,ptilybeestiSe .•: "a thing of beauty is a joy, foOiei."-[Antia• - . Cora'Alowatt Ritchie. ~. ' , • '',. . - - • THE LATEST EAUTIIQUAKE.-*ARTLING PHEN'OiDINA Ir GEAYAQUIL."-The HOW . , brought-by the Panama stelimar, ineltalims a report front Gnayaquil which,will interest •' all who have noticed the remarkable !Mtn -- rat phenomena of the that few ytaius=--plien ,-omena which have given rise to mulch sexi oas consideration %mono 'scientific ..p&ople 'and to more wild and improbable speculal tion.- In Guayaquil, between',Point Pasado and Point Ve,nado a peculiar volcanic move- , ment has taken place. In a space' of two leagues the surface_of.the earthlundulated slowly, and great chasms and deep circular • excavations were opened. -- A 'new lagoon, • was "formed, and between the shOre and-the sea there appvared a large sized hill. -During alt' this fearfulcommotion the ' hills along the Coast were observed to pc; in a .state of unrest, and large land slides took place, carrying with them rocks and trees. • For four days this agitation eentitined, th 6 undulation being from west to mit. • The • 'precise date orthese phenomena - is not .giv- ea, bat - thew must have, Laken place early in the month - of March.: it would seem; from this that the - throes of the earth') whit z year or two ago, sent desolation and through some of the most populous districts of South America,- are notyet'whifilri spent, " AFFECTNG CASs.-- • -The :Loitisyll • - I COURIER-JOURNAL tap*: ,"A gentienuut write Cats froin.a.n,adjin.ning, State: ant - a tniserable inan.! . My only son la .Ant ,:q . ulte ieight years of Inge, • and yet he • not, 'only ear a and chewy tobacco, but ite''Oetidste in ;parting his hair in the middle, rend in.; de.' 'elating that tnotheritas-a.belter night, to - the ballotthan.l have. ..reLltne, for heaven's eake, what: shan't do with' Mu& To this the Macau' GSH renM.V eS . tak,:the liberty etanswering the quetw . lion of this afflicted parent. • litterview Y, the , Y'onng gent/ems 4111)0ottwelityntinuteseabh., - day,' for.cote week, in the preiieuee "or A bed . • poist, and a bundle of keen hickory -We will answer for the result.'? A mans / of r =alined own-virulent at Chicago was dissolved by the Ord-fisted Dartner knocking the other down and, stitop. leg on him with his -Woodcli leg - _ - in 19 MS GM
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