11 II Ini EMI FORTY-Sikni _.. t . HT_R AD fort. tiClOcatb. ‘ Pler 4. Part Hirlmond. E D, CO., • . 'Nfin,n; Bc, 1,1 n :%1 4,)I:NTA IN AND BLACK Is:nnes'lle use, ~: end `tile ' • !.‘,••tng .1 nal I market,: PI.N"E IZNOT %IITE ASTI, -JACI64ON CORBERRY" COAI (2.05;i' Walnut AL Philadelphia, Orrice,. : • 110 iiroadwiay. New York, t 11 Poane Street, Ropton. • I:. .1. WELD. HElclii W. NAinft. ED. An 'Law's. 11.o.sur A. Itlce, Ja 1— . I'ier l No. 5; Port Richmond. • • HA AS I ,.& BRE•NIZER., • i Miners and Shippers of 'HE SUPERIOR • URKEY RUN COAL; Jan. 1.'70 AND SOLE AGENTS FOR =a=M2tl== PLANK ID G . E C 21R "t" , C4lnut St. Philatlelpl - • 81 Triton,. Building, New 1 11 Bootie St., Botitun. 1•'...4 19.'70 . • ( li C'ASTNER ; STICKNEY Si WELL' • Mitls and .Shippers - of • C fmm Burnside Copa LEW N (Rod BtirNTAIN (NOtite Ash.) 39 Trinity Building, New ror, 19119.e4: J 203 Watmat Ntmt , Philadelp 20 Donne Street. Boston.., WII,IIW N.Y.; 6, PORT RICHMPTN.M, P Jan. 1, ' ,Pier 7. For} RiclunomL 11.A.IIINCETT, NEILL Bz' Sl►ipper:ofAnthracite Httuni .0 - 0 'A . forth' sale of the eelebrutekl la \li city, wi ..t.TRIEBEL'SLoct tam and I.',6rnside shamoldu All- Coal, A 4POI Ilc and rEAcn \ lOt FA • Led Ash Coal. • • FitOM 11.011,0KE*, 'Phi lH : cf varlet h.s ut Lehigh untV'Boylati IMA.TEI) FAMILY COAL. ' St , ,te Aaents, in the Eastern marke Atlaatie . amt th•orge's Creek Co.'s celebrat tINOL'S COAL . 217 Walnut Street' Mitres:— Newßoom York, It; Trinity Ifn i ['my - Metter. (..'lettoto !b utte S 1:13<”,t ..... 9S Doane Street. lebritary 2.1 'Ol • ier !•in. Pimk 11l nd. JOHN , R. .WHITE • Shippers - of Coat, Ir. No. 316 -WALNUT ST., PHILADEL• •, - Drpotx tor Storart and Sale of foal: • NO. 7411 We,t Thiri:retith Street, .Necr. V , 902 Third Avenue. York. ive.•,AVlrorf.No. 99, IntireNtrrrt, Provl AV!.:irf.' Mt. Washington' ten ••iivral V reef. 110.q..11.• • • Jan. I. I :ItAIS KLIN OF LYKENS Vt • A t.Ei,l.< AItE,r.IUtIONED that t) .•;^ twtt,yh' twit , (Ilk Cott I at, ;Indy). thy.:ll:t - t,t_ti•lnyht thy flu.. (At.. will It , Ili,: ittt Yte •ttle I 1tt,z1.1:1.1. N.Av Y•frlz.. - Nt.w ttittl Sttitt` • lit-try:3,ot 11.\I''t 1., of 11:111-Ittt , n - C,; Iteut In II„" iintt 1,111 , w. ,Vl , ll'it:af thel,llregenvi 11.11 , 1 pr , tt.tirt•tt ttt , ':l , ...ta - 1 : oti . h,•0,11111 ; , 11/11.11 to 11,1010 , :rd 1 0 * 1,(1 •. :tittl their - 1:0 1 1 ' , , , t , t • g, art• f‘t:` , l%/. , •: N N \V:tli tt ft I.la:utelphia 1,1 IZ.C.osi Urinity. , l;utlilillZ. it:: • E1.1.,11.1 Mt I ..zt i;i:' L 1: •tIrC. .1 .. .)r \ I'l4BM, Yr I s . ft... , \‘, • .; I'i4 I't ' 3 N I iti ••"111:k1,•igl N S ~i. .....c ..l ~a „~a .Franklin Lyke - r : Ls Va • Of ( !I'2 Art•lttut !•trratf. ;•:.t1.t.;t11,1 6'4 Tritlll:\l6llH/11Z : N4'll lof pi:ll4 r ;tttrret, vt. •, je. I. N vVALTER,. DO'NALDSON & , : 7 ) AS I . _,EFIIG I i COI 'V.09•11 ..trvet. - 19 Tritlit, Vail•llitt:, New V.+l4 , !eeet. • MIMI I 3Nd.rtli 1'.,r1 I:rninuund. C. $(.1" (YU & S I Minors add Shippets of Co 11!1",, , ,A1:K {l} ItRVtHEIui (IlV'*t I - Z:AN ' :0-1N" De:lEl44 .1.7.4 h. I:imil +:_uVVEN ::.41',A 1 . 1111. 1111:11•111A—No. *:24.w a. 1,1 19 Dua:to M. "..,* 1 —l,ll 1;n, •:,• i t,,,.••••.. • • =ES =I KELLER & NUTT 2nd Shippers' of t c 14 )6 4 I \ •••11*.Wr • 1:+ - ylt111:13.111 VIL'A NKT.IX RFD •L• 4 l Rif; ItUN 1,041 . 7 5•r4r, - ' 61"1:." C s Trii9ty Building'. N. V. walnut strrel,ll,l,4ia Pi...T. I;. nontiA. TrING. witrrE .k-s 1 Ay, Minersl, Shippers of Col •.Vttnot t:rn..l-hr-Lv, INildinz: tttt . ..• ;1, of The f.1P.0..1,:ng Co:•4:- • \ 1.; , :i11101 • oral :t Hil'Kt)ILY ANI , A:l4 :11-• Nl_ ~.I;.`OIC)K.IN t • . r N 0.3 . l';. r IJ Pori irrtzn.or:d. OHN ROMMEL!, JR,, & BROT ••••1.1 A•: - INTN I'6ll ". • • •"'t• :.0 I:- .Alllll' 'it”fiN fre,biarttitr ;t :. sltrn!,-.1 :lAN' EL WEIlsT;:l: I ••" . 4 ' ;AVIING LEHIGH :at V4.1 7, .' , %Vallint rhii:uLt. in, ' 4 4,4. - 4, 1:.0.t0n. fLooat x T.- .I.r.r V. rill AM. Nlart•ta • VANDUSEN BROTHER - kCii T:clPrY an) • .4, S 1 orte•Lt L:•:uitalu. l.ora~ . HITE AND RED'. ASH CO (Pc. nwhq,,ma. . • ,,, so '4. .. 1 / .110jk:S:.;-.EnZl%..ZIIK:tb , • • k:Je!) - CHS. ' ( I'll \l .e! Sirvel, Pleit:t4e:l.%.,:-. -:, ....-: . 111 2::,3-Iway, Nilv Y"11: - . 1 :', I , r,me.:-.t.„ Ito.v.on. ' Jan 1," =EI DOVF?7 &. KENDRIC X1):...r. siltiEwri or the trletorate4— Si'3ft ,or Riinbow and -Keys . , . . . . - ~• ~ , . -• :. .: , , - . ...%1771 ! - ,,, -- -•::- . -- ..- . • • • .. , .., . . „ „.. .. _ ......... „ . ..„ .. ~__ . . .. . . . . ,_, . , ... , _ . ._..• . - _ • . _ . • - - - • . • - . . . _ .• , . . . . • - . , • , I: 'lt- • • I L [; .:•-- --. • :. • ''''• , , . • - - k_ -f • • f•-- . • •- .:_ - ---; - • , . vs- • •-•-•.- .•. , •, 4 - .:-.-- ..-., E z-4 •—..,.< A-. .. ... '1 f ' ." 1.r . ..• • • , ; ^ - . 4 . . - ' f..:. - i - -.- _.-' __' ---='- • -- ---..--. 2 ..... -- ' ----- 77 - :- . 7;...., , [ ' . , ~- i . , -- , A ' ''''' f -, J *:, • • . - . . , -- ‘-' .. - • ,_ - ~.... • . . . .., ' • • . '.. A. ''', : , "....- .t...... -M- T ...-ff. .... 1 1 i 1r -r-- r .---'-. 1 ' • . . . , , . . "., • .. ViL ' ..• .•' r - . ' ''.' 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I^, -- 7 -......,",.., ' - •',.r - ' , - ,_ s ii . --- "'°•! - -.7!. ._ - ',- • -....- /0 : , .... -. .• . . . . ~..., .. - . . , .. . . • , --- ---- _,.T...• Ar•Aligegarg=gri: , -.N .;« - _ .. . . . - . . •—, . . -N . . i- . - . ' - ,- .F. ne- ~r, . -__ ..----'%,-- ....:- ' •..'' . . . . . : ~ -:''.ar•:.:,l- -, e- -- - - .' - . 1-- 4,t-"-•,- ' -* .-. - h .'' '. , . ' ,-- , ; , 7- - . . . • • - .. ~, „., .-, -, -1,- . ;• ..,---,...,--,.•••:•-•,..• : 72,- sat:, ,r ;&,;2. - •-•- ,-,; -- - - .....1.- . • --_T - ' - •- • . • .l . - ~,.. , . - . • . , -, ~. ; , i, • . • ;s• .*" '' s - • *--- -..,,,..-.. `---Air....,- .'''-,;. , '".l 1 - - 7 1 7 * '•-• , - I =f'- - - - '''.. - - 2. ' 7. ... ;:±7 , -. , --:: ‘ , .i ~. ,- • .i.i. t, ......,*; . -...--r•-• e _,..... • 1 . . - . . . . . . . .. - - . - ~ I . - , , ~ • . - . • • 1 : , I , • . . ••.• - - . . . A- I - - '*.t. 4-. •,, • . _ _.— • . . . . „ . . - ~. • . • • . -.•,•' - .! • - 1 ' 1 / I "Lir n d aceoM/ F:lml*ct or oartizmni, to the year mu. bi Batman tt.)2,164.' 'in thii Cies. 111 Moe al pie Coart Of 'hornbill kits *a umtara Dieblet atmikaiymaa ''• I 1. T Y - . . . '„. '"--.--.e.......- . . . . • , , -- t -- 7. - i ---- ---- t -- ----- , .. • - OM YEAR: No.l CO lEEE Iffil 'la. 11°rkj NGTON uunokin ME CO.; =3 ENAN: t g nip- 1= CELE-' for the BITI, SI MEI MB ft , i •101,11E1Asi: N.tu J irri.r.. : .101 l . 111.T4.-::ilr - rrci.. tic- I WM. HEISSENBU TEL & CO., 7rnCSa ; Shlppen And WholeNale. in r. near I 70- 71ri I Schuylkill ; -Lehigh . and .Cumberklaild LEY. 1 • C. , O V E - - -. . • Pre • aro • " ii "f ' l',lll'rY 111%1 DING I• 1 IWO ‘ll,a- i. .... -., •A.. 19. NEW XORK. ~• I ;II N4,-c — ..... "'`') . l :' Ageht-' , liar Nw'sV York awl V Ititi:t% Go: ;',,,. r ,•„ 0 ,, i ; Sa!t• of I.FIP:. (;ft ANT .7: CO.'S PLANK- itlf'4:l-:. :111 , 1 1,. t . / 4.4 41 p 11.1A!..1 IlltESIZEI:;:S TURE.EI I:1:N i,'4.).‘ f'-, , 11.1- ,;,21 ': III:irvli ,26.7:(1- .1- ly jai,: :II- 4e r - . '. " uri 1" lu ,r- i' : DAVID SON,. YOUNG & CO.' l • • • • • LOCUST N7F.NIN. SHAND - fKI:, 1..:11!(131. oar :*;•,.„..n•.,(11 - N.1111.:1:LAN•11. 5t:11.1NT4.:5 WII.EI- . ....11.111Di .1l )".•••;1. • C atROOM N. Id, TRINITY DI ILDINII, Nl'. \V Y 4 •liK_ Orden. ; WM. M. I)A.VIDSoN, formerly of Ty.lfr I:artiPq. SAW]. yr w NI:. enla %v; i• • raro...S. Cu Itt /BERT 1 BUCKMAN. ejati 15..*Te) " • 70- •1 ~.4-e•••••••• • - • 0 . , • - (2.0_1... - . .. VAN: 'WICTZT Ft & STOUT,. . ' . 311N1:1 , ...f. ANT) SIIIPPIL. , OF THE I . . s;„,ti ( • Celebrated "Fulton" &."Stout" ilehigh) Coats, . . i From tltt• fiber ale and the Stotit etillierteg. near ..liazleton„ Pa. D•div,;red dirrvt front !nine,: 'on '.-•, - ''l,oBrd 1e..... , e14c :MAI'. JotiNsoN,,llonotits; and y t , ItttuNmvicti. N. r 7 ,i.. 1 . ., , • (44 A: 46 Trinit y Iluildltiz. !-* ()Mee.:lll flrod avray. 7, 4 iewNoi.k. ;: I t i , Temporary at 119 Itrorniway. , 1 :kitty DI, '64 . ,-,-- V ti EV t • v r" 0., I - IM! I No., 7 1" - T: - .1e11iy . 1,11i3.1123g, II I llnictilwili, ~....,,, ( ! ili . ut. ' / New Yolk.;. ' •V Fiil'l..! NI.:. - JOHN' W...A•TN% - iioll, .7.1 2---4.zu • 'NS, 'MTIV ADELL, CON'AAT & IVESTONt L. , ~, t , NO. 111 prtoAiiw4x - , „NNW Y.01114r . .: , ' Ell= IMMO! =Ell :ENE ' - i !i._ ti it %I% REM N G al, MI RI O.), ME ME MOM N. J 1 ..., ER, tr•.la'.l. , k Oh. Arth port Kai . ;..-.1 by . ---1 I En Ea Eal ,wm. St l' 111 BE . . Port Ridlion.: ‘. . t . • PI rr No. r 2;, int Rlchiram 'I.. . AUDENRIED. ORTON & _CO., .Miners and Shippers of - • ~ FIRST CLASS COAL, L o('rsT Id 0 trICT.I II!:. . Fryru 'our two large ;lila relebntted Colliviiit: • . " 1.1 A ZEL DELL:* ............ -.. ...L.A . :. I'. NORTON a. i4O. ...CON - TIN) MT A L, - ( 400 111 Iki ir. k 4 1. - DEN It I rD. i • .11 ES • Free Bulitttla, Red fr.:pie/13W ("01.KET7 • Owea, Lont . ... (*()ltzett, ''• • TAM 1.11:4\ - , T. paw - up:al - dee:. - I.la-LDTT M(amtali and I,prix•ery. also vla Selinylkil:' point uee,-..ilble -3V• Itat fTtrret % i lillwlelphtn , -Ur *deli Nee- York. . rec.!. Illentug. • .1. NORTI - )N. , citts. li. N (ATTU:C. Tt. (..TOTTItELI.„ Jan. 1-:- ).• • . ._ _ . • - 441.64 Fitritlshing CloOs, &e., 1 _, 0 A 2- F, . , ~ No. :art mAitKET ''.- , TCEI:T. lIIILADELPIIIA. Jan 1.1, .7.) . I- i.l-Gur 1 , -- . ~.. 7 111IN2TLP.P . ' r - • l' --. inftlre 10 1 . 11 .stunt strret., Phil:oh-1r hi: ,r •I. •.• , . , . ~ • : .• lull" • 1 ' -74 ••: --' -- ••••• ••• :.' •• 1 •t • . t.'. NUN V. - 1 31..t.1* 1 j -1 4 : S :::. 1 1 1 1 11 1\ ... 1 1 1n 'T u O I N SI . .. t: I t: :::ia4 ; le;:th it'. : . RIEADA.4 JUNE•TTA, 18 7 0.-A Cii-Part tier- , i.. OW; ... , :al.lb4limi.TlL fi ' on. or tile °West irj, nittildlq- R.lllriptS bosi.:a this day- f,,403...1 haNt ,-.-n tlir lilt- PLiat, and frotn loag 'experience and superior Mehl dersigned; for the purp.Ae 0t..511:-.:INJ:. and Sit libri N.• , ti.•,, w.• :1i . .. prepared I. furnish - •-ood tvorlitt. reltSoll - VA.I.LEV (MAL ..,-1-. --. ~bl.• price.. .' ' ~• -f 1 • , Wt. tnahu flrt u re Ilh e furn it I) re. :itid al:4 tot..iitint . ..' ', ~ From the. EILANKLIN voLLIEI,O ," . ' priced furniture of superior quality. : A large .s'to.i.i: , . , . - - Noitlontll;elltiLd (NaintY. tinil,;t•-the lino i - ,4100 of ;of f u rtitt tura- Lilt; up , h:intl. Gre s),. illltde t" on:Or. Pipe 'No. 11. Pt.. -Richmond. • - • Vount.l - 4 , , - 1 1 o.li. Worti 'mid , °Mel. Fortilture rm . . . (4 :.z:(11"11-1-1 - 1110. & (.11•. .... _ SNYI)ER- & SHOEMAKER •`1 , :. - ...q . ,_: w A L:0-1. s , „ :I.9 i il iid ,„ . mid 4d i j 4 ;,-.. A% A I..fttN, .1.111.1.11 1 IN!,.OPf ,Jt ),A. j, : st llt r, f -1 T . , - 1411 L.. 70 1 ' " • - I : z Ml.l'll 111:0S.,•RE F.:4.: 6: C 6., Shalirolcui • - Sli i p pers anA Dealers itl . • • • ~ 1 Ili 'IRE RAILVNG, WIRE GUARDS, tor slor'e ii. sm -- 1 - 61. • T/lOS. C. REESE, t'• . - I Itt- Intntzi, Fiectorlett, Sc_, Remy Crimped Whe . • . -', e() , k. - 1 - • - - • • N • • ..- 'l' rftt ' k ' , IL LT 11. ~. .1 As. .1. I- , . - ti 1P P. ; chat, for elcattfut; ore,, mai, &v. liettyy Seri..en' • ".. I. ITAnernt N'3l till. If Ir , :nr Itot-utts-Eld- ' ClOill. Mid rottl.Sereeirii, Wire W.elthingltor xt(eep.' • • .-• '!- '.. ~1 ll'. IL I%f - i.iiNr.n. ' i: -• ; and poultry yard's. .I . !tipt•r; MakPrs' Wires, illntss Nod SOCK .t_it:Nll: :OK (i. W. STN 5 :. 2:::',, W. 1.1.1. h No'.VN ~ 3,,, 11. '7) 24-st ! Imii Wirea 'lon sle•. - es, Painted screen., Ornanrea- •7 . '. 1 . PINE - FOREST COAL • , - . . . . .. .. . . . . - , . .1 tat Wire Wort:. : Lt try Inforniatlon lit aililresodn2 ; ' tit , tltatitilltir"M -, 'M. WALEF:It ASi iNS, • ; No. 11.N. , 11.1/ itt If street, Philltdelphia.'! • •a . 4rWALNeT ST.. '' .l (13 TriiNiry Itt:moiNG,. ~, . • . , eorbetn ! frttlt. I Il''1 l'' '7O .- - , • Pit 11... t o.A. , I NtAr -Tonic. 7 \, -,. ,i - - - 1 ”: 1) E.g . ° VAL . . . • . . , 1 Louis" .NIT.DEI:. -•1 C. It. SIIOENIA,KEIt. •. •` , •-, •,.-' . : - ~, .' ‘,.. j„,riit . ,lo I,. O 3 :I T I I I I :A ti CtiW PLANTES SONS. ; 'Jan I. '7ll . 1-1 y ! EAST ,FRANKLIN LORBERRY VEIN COAL . . . , l e l- ,No. LI I et hielkumod. I A ,1" Y EAST . E'RANKLIICt.LORBERRY COAL 1 • , LOOKING-GLASS' AND NCTURC-FDAME :STORE, ;' i thonat: s. EXPeq.tErt,'N,r. cortnox, if. P. ititetti.lftli.. /if Pt new MoLgeselusivett7 lq: Meicsni. REPREIEII, t I . Goltpt_lN .5; CO. who are lull sole .Vent.. Itinil,.,rl, , . ~ To No, it tiorth,silth SL; Phihdci: . ' : REPPLIER,- GORDON .& CO„ - i.r, , ,rd„,, , .. - „inr%i r n i l , •, • . Viet,! . t e ma s t - altfays tletiend upou -it- . Where they otTer :at r‘Querd kir‘-s a - •tier:il I.Sviorl- . • 1 --" l', muoo itti,ooking...iiht.,,, t , View 6 . ..1 T• ‘ ittit; I . .arge ' ! I- - pun • -... • ~ • . • I Vu. : ; _ 'I 'll alnut fit., Philarlelphlal • : , Frun,-11 PIO: c'Alirr..n., Pliijn rani t,i,•latfinnt,,,,( lIINFIL4 AND $1111141..}:S tly ( WV It Ils :., No. VII Broadwo;..Room s, Ne•at• york,; rii•:.;::,• Fratit..s, i'-',,0110, , 5,, N1,,n1,1 , ,;,w,, k i ., - , • :• 1 NT - i. 'it hoaut , Atteiet, 'loom 1. DIM on. 1• • . .111,S1 II:A criWPLA N I ret 'SON , ' locust, Mountain, Mammoth Vein , ,Red Ash. • j„,, 1..0-1..i. ~.,. ~ HENny I .. 5 if,11,, I ,- Felt ht, -- .. ,1 -r.rui _ , s.: I.c North'e.nxth st....l'hilada , . torberry, and • , ; --' ' ' : ...... ... • ,-. -.-i. ,- , ----- - ----, ------ - • .1 ~ PILES on. HE'siotiniloiDAL TiThiOßs lii- . . . TOWER CITY, LYKENS VALLEY COALS ,. • •!.. ' - •••llliiiitingtql Dd. - 1 „.• ix . : /,, , ,.. ; , ,, „ , : 1 ,. :„ , ,,,E . ,e r na1,1111 n i1, 1 t1ei11n 5 Anil. I teltilK,.} : pt If. , II:, and_ ptrtnani .itt,i elll'oll, , ik MI, , .• - e. ' . ..... . ---__.__________ _._ L .' : 1 out pain, daitzer, instrument:4pr 011.1. if i..:r;.' 1 1Y WM. :. 1 oni,,,z : !Tr, lislrtlaii7t a S ; . re ( V: .o l :!,‘ l N ia ,, d . e s lP N l t 1 1 ,..... 14, ....: i , : ....' . !.----- , --'- ---.1 --- ,i• A. ; 1 1..1,NDLES, voi Spring t_larilt`ii gt.... I . OF FICI4. ------, ' - I 27 Iltoatte'Stree.t, ,Rootn No. :;, Roston. of THE mocArtAQuE coAT.,' , Phil a., Pa.,v, ti eau refers u tit'over Eleveralunilt•od ; - ' iiiar...l'2ll, '7O . . . - ' ',1.1.. '. ! COM . P.vbfy,•.No. 3110 and 512 W. Front :..,• 1 . ., ,j 1 orilte I''' ,. .TCili7A."ll'i '4 - Phihtdelphla, win bv ae I.•cori i i . °o rel. A prac t ice of elei; en years us a sperlriltt. in i • '7 . ' WILMINGTON, DELAWARE. ~ 1 ' II tins nii.,:.•.!ii lthi ., ut ii rat liVre, %I:arr.:o.ls a cue,. In all Tuott.A3 c 11N. ' MORRIS lIACKEIf; il:-..A.A: M.. COOK. • ' ' +: If Clo.. • ` , \ . • -', 1. - We ati• nun' preparki to furnish the Trade, lieut..' ro , iv ...,, t.. 1 ' 4 /F. 1 CAIN HACKER & COOK , -. : riz.ani , li.'otasunters icith our " • . 1 . , 1 ! I . 11 F 'PEE°. F1511.1.P.'s .-- l . ' - - i • . SIIIPPF,IN or , - • ' I .. Colehratea Coal, the, A.-` blocaraque,' ~, , „ , D Ef,,T A l 3 , l , llE i i ; . i , . LoCI.'ST GA.l',•• I.Oet'sT -3 IOUNT-IIN, Itl...l:CK' i ...' . • ' - ' ' ''• . I Ali.t tilt iseanteritsted. W IMMO It to their aul.vattinre,: ' nu.....1. - vniVG-' IiV.A.II Eilold SE. -._ • . - lIEATII. • A[_9l, nrfAI.ERS IN OTHER' I , lll.''T QUA lITIKs OF ; anti reuniony,to en:l , OU tin eonipiny la - fort:malting ii - , . N. W. comer Foueth nud \ln , . s .trec.ts I . 'l - Wai1 . ..1-NV/lit(' NV/lit ( ' and 1 t (- _2(i . _-k sll . (::o.a Is, ~, .!:' , ' , T,r„,T,`;:!rg,tn',lt,rral'iti,',Z,.:Pegningninjr'k'',,lrtg:n.,. ; . !! h Li. A lasu'e fl'o.ottliivnt I , f Sprithi. ll.ilr . .tinil II114: . NO, 7414 Witarint Steek, Pte linielphlo, 'and IT' 1- f.,.. - :•• ,!- -, son them In Ilarre de (Inwe, h Ci.iii rr• ... -. Bean: Inzin;coA aid e , ionterpant:::c ei111.... ,i,„ w iti ni i n gti m : .1 ....Intuit iai hand audJutt.le to order. - hind Wham es. Sal nytklll Rh er. -. \ j •'T • ;" " " En•lerii - ' . JC I I/5: I. STRN'KEIL, --.:. 1• N. 11,-Ab.,i. the Clover !lilt nail Itottd :not Itltu .,- ' shirt tqat .tan AGCNT',..f ; InilitioUS CCal i:0.',.. Coat,. for the Inalitan..tltie of 1 stiil'el7::;.,;l;'klailill.4.--tlell!tiirhtt.r'..7l,....a.tititir(rt;lll::l:'•:•!l!!.....ll;••••ji;tr:',:,ll,?ll::,. . behuylk ill 1.1 a VOL, Tfl: , f.r,t, , -17 Candle:, 17.; e. Lyl/-1,11; role first qmili t t and '', ed. and pri- ,,, irlyzu . ",bo, , ,ly :i...= tow a, an:, i .. ; •, her Itf tLe •• . . ... . . , . , .; . • percentage (lash...mall. . ( May 21, :70.21-ly i IT:Id , . . . 1,1,1 ..:22, 7 1 ) a-tilr 19 -Port 111\ - Inii .I. : ::' :-.,-- 1- ' ' • •‘• .-.. , ---‘-. 1 GAS FIXTURES a N.EIRUSE - 211 , ; 1 .1iA1r.11...s LOVE, BOYER . & -CO., ..., . ~ . , , .• ~, - ..- . sotrrEits op . • . Anthracite' and -- Bituminous :Coals, MEI I= G~LFiIaLANI)VEI\ lIITUNIINOI7-4-01A ; • (334' Walncit 1111LlahrIplila. 1/111ees. l 13 'llonam St., 11o.tron. ( 27 emit Ifent.c St. - ,Prorlfilencr. -11 1 , 1 7 1 y • MM —!.tcw Ijorl. DEA.T.r.n.;; pT. JOHN4ON'eI HOBOKEN R PLANCK . S.L_Kftk VOOD . lu LAN LT It ;It ••••.(111`Y •: • ,-.•!* - S.V !LK Sr NTON. and • • SIJAMiI. T— 4 9 s, C 0 A_ (Rooms 35 and 36 Trinity Itu - - - Aviatiz.niAi.ir:.PE.l.l-1:ILS I? 1 ~. I ,i" .' 1,1:,(11till, WILKI-14.1iA t tRE, . ...,: I.ll7sTi ox, .14E1) A.•lf. 1' ' . ' 3!-)l!%‘ . . CC)l'. si TY:A NT()N. i i.c)c("Sl' Nt4)l, - N - 0 5 !N Cl . NtitElti..k.Yl). 111:0-‘11) Tt)l', ETt'... • ' ~• S , • AGE'S:2. 7 . for 'New York • And the North of the et , lehrated Cf ) t • St.'ll,l:llkt;E BURN -1.•:44.1.14111(01 COAL. THE_ roWELTos and other tlti47.-r.lte C01.1%4_4 - , J AMES W. . 'CT . .liiri„.4. -1% LsTo.N. • April;s; • t - • OFFICE OF THE ELEVAT ING co., z 4 CONOIEI:CIA 111-14- 3 .1. 0 . N. 1. COAL - COAL. COAL. Et.i.x.vrtNo IlaVliPt. a .1 of Lot mid Ittock:ttle, - w:tlt Iro,ltrepat ell I at :I,‘• ofttoi n:: of ItaVillati ion to malt, from the Ertl , - r Canal, or Lake, any fiutinfityoS MAI. for 1, ...forage or t ram , M patent 14. any - place Fla. he Valtal or Wes.it by tlte tition to favorable terms nanny - , parties in IMMO.. Their, i.t I...wen loi:ateil fora gmteral 61 - t - buf,ines.s. Cl-11L,S Vief..-Presid‘mt.. ..%P.ircil - 27 , •CO tiininn. blind;incrq. &r. rro COALNACES, OERATORS, MINERS AND • ; T FUR P • ' • 0 GRICE & LONC. 1-ibrom /tire Daiitlern. • I :10.1t6.te:1 , TIZEIrr, I'll! I. V1 , F.14.11( t. PA_ W•NIII , I V.LII “Ur' atia`titiulj to, Itivi-r i•1i,,.. - ?: . 40+-i i'ur,eace•f,., , ,,,,,ger , -..1 ‘l,4l,,furql for im..p/••• .or r.irttifj•• w0r...:. .4:13 for any roil:lire-A liilri..!‘` of r.?? 1 .1v..101..i1ar-p-. i es; I -11r , ..e.. u - it'll tni?“.?•ity to - ilrcx•front 51 1•• ,:- 0? N????, , cr0,... :. - rvi. • • .. . i 1 Off ()0 OIIT4 ak , MT:ICING :lAA ; , i. t7ll 7". .1:`, ERA o[3ll 1. 1 1:-..711.1.1.ritiNs . -I- ii!..;ii•lr horse ou:it'd% •20 In. bon*. 6' ft . VI r 01,;, ,, 19;1%. , fly wh<:4 : l Z 1 0 .7 in. :I 4 I ii..o hon. m • pop slinft -1.. - 1 In. 'd ift in:X I i 11. - lirtit i puma wheel ft. it iii tn. kin : :the !at+, 4 In. pttelii with bobs and catineetint; roils,. ,lias Issat used to tin; a 2. In. pump.; -- -- , s ; 1 sixty.litirse.ennine, IS lit. (on'.6 fl, str oke,' li , !ft: ; fly n'twel, tettlt,pitrap wheel. shafts and nil r,.tini.,•- ti&es; .1 . &lint Tuft_ diarn.or Min iV Iron roiight In sha ft . • I 1140--! horse enstine, li ;inch bore. 4 feet -; stroke, :with :r litsa, y fly s heel. Itlso with pump'; - _NV heel. it ft, diam., 12 i ti. on the taci.: flu. PLich I' ifrilm ; • I l'-i ft. than', Wrought ironeliall ; I b.)llers 31 ir i s, Main. i Stai, 'tOS ft - , king.v.-Itli all einuee:toris and:with all i pranji-- -- 1 , `inn: connections. • ... , . . , • ! I lame lionhie br , aler With ti horse criehie. i::: . • i Sip,opo-:GITAitAINTEE. ~ •,',l tuessypors.t.? engine wan (171.1111 •111,1 d all (41111.iiv- :• liI;CH. LEAD cabal* all Other Loud i g .Irt_platie • I set-of laraev cone ear- j i ' " ' - ..1 - t ' o n. . m w r rtri a fin ' s ' i l iiri ' : , , I rucks and wire; r pe; . . r. ' r ;1;:t.:.F. - ir itn rade:tied I'llitteness. • • 7.,• - , heavy drift ears: 44 in. gunge , i'i n iar7,e coal cars: ; ;.„ 1 ",.!. For its trnequale4i Itb_.. - tthility. . ',sine gunge AN LIM P. iki it. tL I-t. Set crat larfta.dunii. • '.,,,-- ' ‘........,... er.....,„„.„,,,...„ - i r.,,,,..,• ..-1„..,..... 55 ' ~.... trucks_ ; ire'' feetwiry• rope, dilierent sizes. A tame „" ": s :`• '"` -'' ""-',-..- - -';''" -6 ' ' '''''''i'• 1 'I lof hlncltsinillt.viols, ati: its. vises, Lieiloofs; de.; A ; Lastly for Its Ecqnomy. • . . 1 .n4 : 0 1 1„ 0 ,..t t oZ n s , ,r. it, , a ti n d a hind i. t .. , ,:; 1 1 ..,.. 11 ,,5 nif, Lajitioonm.usoves,! krnutl ,I • , t t , . . _ I. costs - WM lo pant. with. Thick Lead than .any and T, tat/ front 2 . lb. to 42, lb, tier yord. 7 Second I ether . Wr.ibi Lead extant: The sarn . ....Wsight , eovers t un4 11104-toils - 2itt yds. In In., calttruu iiikte: 100 , Ytia. I Wire S. - article, I.l*More Dumble,und- oiakets Whiter, ~• in:column pipe; 121 in. :wit: pump; 1.16 fit. pole. I Wa t t . _ r . 0 on torn .. 1 locomotive. 4tfrii. ers. suitable fOrsibill,inX.l - I . .IttiCo." : .I.EAI) is ~...4 1 - t e (.11.m . pc.s . t and_ li.- -, 41:• . ' 1..i661";13 iicrriZEN-Ai. i ears, or on an'.l run ore hank. Also, the wood work of 7*i to - i- .7 6i rr. fr i oN i heer r ,k.rrs ; au rron , mlinit sh .Lc, blaeltsrattlx and ear- , l 4% . SAFETY . i 1 011...te..4. - enter Mim, 04 • blowing tut/ sultsine, for large i. ''' inrnacti. .. .. ..', ' • . . • I - 1 itiOshorse Pil ' , eke ir.gille. tn toneof chalm'caridea L . prei:K. y,,INc• Eseet.i au o th er it ti e s .. ' ROOT'S IMPROVED TRUNK ' ENG I NES; '1 1, . 11 , 1 1 3 ,,;, 11 " r ' e elU ' i l le- . • - rani s. ' Stationary. i•ertsble ail* lariat. L• * ! .-„--,..'•' 110 feet hoisting; dente, i . lit. .F . m . tt i. i . rne , i , ..; =_ P ied Durollay.. ; ‘,.. - . r ,,, . - . • , lath -bolts end Inc- I . Donble Pisum Square Bois Engines, tiotst.;. ' • '"---4: ~ .. , • :Ltineu, cirtifilete. ; . al., For Its Unrienie,l Whiteness.' ' • • ; . ing•lianhirtery.for Cent Shaft*. Sloping, i ll four ~1 ten • ."I ,,,, rtable en. ,t it feerlitilltlng ,Irton. i . ' :id. , For Its t r riartfpnased Covering ii -, it.s.itly. , Olin Milts, Stores, Am.i..te: - ,I sjiallers. :tato. X Yen, I d :;- .. .„ .-„, ; i In. II y, for mil Great Economy. ,• - • - one of these Holsters ran be seen riuththe daily at . I . 4. .- i -h• - • - .TJ in. xl3ll. I - " 3 1 s uu4; 3ft dtax".,i f . t. , % , ,,,,i;g• i being the Chenpt"st ilandsomest,ran.l M 414 Dnrahle '‘. -lIILL A. liAititlh" L'elliery, .11.thanoy City. 1'... •1 • ' 2 ",-, • 31 in...X.li R. i ~,.. , • •• -.- a ..; ... .., 33 i n. _s• sort_ I Niark ltio.a.‘u ' 1' ~ I . Witlte P,:int trt the 7. - Airld, ' 1 Pc.olTlt.'rLAli, A.TVENTION IS , rivrrr.D To ,l 2_ .-" i - -.20 in. x Itt ft : ~ - I 7 3111tr. - 441 .*: 1: . 1 y i: . - . • the4lelster, which has no .Nual. ~.:o dead points. 1' 2* " 1 2t in, il2 ft. I " i ft-x. 4 . 1.,. tII ry ONLY BreK. LEAD AND - 111, 7 C . :K ti,i - i•ind two plsums In one cylinder, either.eu4 2 - 7 , 21-in. X 61t : 10 tens 1.1 , 1Ke Pfill t*,‘•! I't ;•--- i-, . • • '.'ZI*C- - . .. , lof srli Jell is tas:lng fall steam when the other is t I " 11-horse. tuiratar , loon, tinx%. i 1 4 . _ • , . , . , 1 -passing centre. It reqoirtu uo friction stratia„cluteties 1 1 to prlghitue bbiter., lag of Iptinip gill,_ty - .; '. ~, 1 : , T,7." rr -1-Sl,fl IIE. CO: i .:VINCE4).... -: • or-brokes of any kind.. Started, reveried or stopped I 131y"ile2s in. sssie . r . rill ftißo I nevr 11ft exhattstanz ‘ hin , .. _. - . point or.revolution„ be the la) _- 7 lain. i , - 3)3 ft rient6: second-1%40t i _ _ ~. , . • ! , :s . It ing.tantly..an,l at any ,/ , i t, . 1 , t. i , Ftystx, is in.Coi. 0m... , 4r - wire trope i' I barivlftefia:t fitn;rurilf:fif.l G , " (he Afienitfaciaters simple moveinent of 11 single er . • er. % ug no ey .. , ' live s eel sc-ews, or other adjustable parts -wich In I -,1 with bolt s awl rlielpi. - - &oft 21n .. ..:, , ,epine, .„.. ; _. , .; ;_ • . I C . • - ether holsters require th e knowledge nail constant 1 iiio 3--ilx-...4111t-C'elY„„litiPiPe !Sint" / " . 1 uses of an .experieueed 'engineer, out bel put in the 1 ill "....40 7 . 4 4 -, I. m, chin , hautboy plpe, .. Wags of the .Inest, lnexperieneod pers4ns. All -Its 1.. w ~. 0-7 1. ; • Pump , shafts.._wheeis_lia , d arse - enclosed in the. care br cylinder. 1 t . 1 I.ooOf Sta. pipes. . blocks of varloU3 slx- - / il W iiii tirt are lnil e rtill us pro ant tacled from breakage . the erect* 0 /%1 i - 1-1 : 110 -1 10 „le PIMP: • - 2 ocyrJwillere. 03 11l- dhow -. duet, dirt. and rust. or weatker.. Its extreme light: , .4 - 2•16 . :;N".... , .. ..," ~ . . , __with five front! ta and #1 1 i ness, corupticttiess and rapids pee4l.hleltlY eaatarleAd .! 4 I .! 4 •4. ... I sm all fo ot t at i i i,... ' , -I I for this use; - Order, received fortheAawallsetorer I ~, .11 „. i ..,:, .. . - . ~.8 15,0 mairari on haa( 6 . .. Iby the atelioirgued. who will ahlaitir.ellihdastilliejya •s;i Ai i i ," A. tng i n :- . sa t o 'IL ats for yeti ..,,, catalogues, price lute, dro.trinixestiatateNtuktichner 114111.1 pr.top a.. s a , . - - 1 Ile small. MD' and Juror . 414 . . miner, . ea. Information. .. ; • ZIATSA.I I IfErL - fitAllalrr. Xsasartoy . Clty.l'a. ,li . ~ pumps. , . small rant! ladle% A. 11. CHURCH. atulallte. ra. I , - At the ilathlnery Depot on Coal street. .- - -.-... I . Mar. 211,',81-13! .- - . .1-,-, ' • ,•' ' I I Nor. 11: .16144-lf. - • JA11137,151%.71Z01: .. • _ N - -•.- 7 : Having ilevoinpe,l in both the .litt hra , t:e I u int non , : regions 01 Penney I vaixin... t r e e Dur s t ~„ t _Ad rannet• in th . L.• Jney with (4 . ‘ttii,.l4..nee their vart ,, its ~ty les ot , Enzlnes 'with every gurtrllntee of their w or k 1 ship and,j,, , riorra.inee, an , / 'refer to the 3a:ltty n..ie in 1 oper.lti on in tlte SA , veral mining .11 , ntlets, , and forgo% the State and eatintry. Titeir sutail, not: coat, _rent pcivrei lopeu.-ro- 1 recher with their %durability; =rest 4 , 4;noure *nd 1 Ilxhc tinily expenses over unlnpil porter ar t•r4littar:.- bwotnntive - (as proven by of severni y ) make f i va,,t saving in fi.,-;ent ,pailt4eirfirst cost very si•att rebel:us:7l4 ls7o k :-bin \TILE ROPE. i gatcricacTUltkri Tr .. .CR I ER CAtTpt Cit., New 'York. • • I All sizes' Hemp or Cent rt.... brig,ht w.. aiWest. The Itope manufactured by lilts firm ar CO;ll.ldored by all piu - tiee using them, tlie nest and handsomeat tiope 11044 In the world, made invorl.ibly from a - itw:i .I.nawn from the best Norway Iron, : ttie lurgest shlktts In 1110 U. st.• Navy. :re rigged. ith 11.1511.13 lit- nip, arm. rn pia% of t ite.4-11opc can b. n With and erdert taken. and all inThrtnatlon it'l l / 4 ett„ , "atiti Oftlers pr. Inapt ty litltd at t it , ilLAOrlkt.rt! rates nttd clreu , Ihrs furnished by H ENDERS ON, oppostte .11itters' Not fittibl rottmille. • Jan I.l':J • • VEfTI LoßnEunv -II 523 M ) , r4 - Vtri a l,Tß .-- 1 ' - .1 11 jilaOitpliia,,Abuctlinmints. . . ....1.4_ . 1.. ' . --- - 1. I . . -------:: -- -:- --- -2- --- * -- 77 - ..:-_----__ -.----.--.,-.7 . . ---7-_ - • .7. , . . 114il#belpljia o tr..• f '.l' I . -K) -M. ROBlltsols et'o:, , - ;:, * 1 - AN • . tESpeeessor, to W. G., II tutzero . . - _ ------ -4 - • .. . r-p- I . s li . ourrats, , 2 f.A..TUFACTEAeiteI dk 717.r..1% tlt.m.r.e. , csr, , T ROMA C * PAR R ISH 1 ,,. ,,. littlit.try, Churit.. Society. Theatrical ticattia, Slits. . ria'nne.rs Itikige..,•dc... • i • .. ' .41PP AND DEALER IN -1 '. 1 No.1:11orth ThiN g . timet, rhlltalellytiln. , •, . ' 1 k • Ileeember -I. I,s'a. • „, .;, ii - 41+-I,y Leiligli,• gatu3 111 Intl Bitnniinoud - • ..... 1 $,••::) , 7"..R. E FPLSOISIE IMPRO;gop . Twelity: • : : ''l C ( - _A , .• , . . ......t". I l‘is Irollut ' , amity Setting MitOpine. The, .chc,l:*.st Fit 44. ILl:us Machine in the Market.,..l9i-eta 1.1.:;,./ ~.: ,t - ,•ry Town_ Liberal coMmts.sion - nilowc.i. • C.,w 4 ;gnlnviits nn Commission Solkited and,-takt;) E. , r ta'rm.':l:o c:cva)str, :,,,Idre, ,, , A. 5.,.11.14 MILTON. oni,Avorble Temp,. ' - ll.lP'll..k golit„ N.O. 7W Uneenut L. l'ittiwkilphin. .ru. . - Alisat 16, •..0 1. , • ' , h , -;int ' • 4 ' . tltiVee--4:41 Walnta. Sit.„ Phltadelplltn.l' • 3 r'. , ) • 1 •Mil‘ - • " It"---1 ' \ I i I ''STER r , CHAL.P.frIV : r it COX,. '' --- 3' . , •,-. ~. • , . • ' Iteport,e3 et Lriwis.&.ALKINS 1- ' • ' , -- ' • , r . i,-.*rw. °aims, ...•. • - ill .1 1. rl b ? ‘ ? 1 ". • L- - .:I ? 011 C,..,, -7,lll.inat.erks, \IT., IN , 1 • Na:,1 , 116 .1.7N1, 311111.1:MS OF r 1: .11 . ;1,1:V•li TEi ( Mi;I: I H.l-,f:r mpt- _ _ JA Xi E 4 ' S;.J. .0 0 -,N N.i It .4. , I Miner tnt!. Shipper of the Celebrated 1 LOCUST ' MOLINTAIN' COAL. 1 • ' rOTT: ,- i sViLI.F.,'s•CIItYLKILL P. Co., t.l. 'lnn l e '7O„ • ' • ... •- - i , Nv E ARE NOW IN "RA.1.14Y RECEIPT! ' :•. , i • Op' SAE VERY ,rrctizon iti►lky ;Free Burning Deep 4ed :1-4! DANIEL WEBSTER COAL i A N_Dt!ztYN! rEIMMODI SQL".I:I:.-EItACTI' (_)I,,I:.IZzI:N I'-: .3(0.6i R01131E1.. JR.. & 11 - abiat St „ i•l,llu<lclphl:y 1!I I)ontie t . Trltil.3 - littilelifik. New .1"tel. IMIIII HIM ORIGI"NAL HENRY CLAI" COAL. ''' ' ''''''' t':a! I d JOHN ROMMEL. JR. RHO.. " I E 'AND EXCLUSIVE M;E‘iTS FOR THE" SAI,P. OF MY ORIGINAL IigNRY CLAY, COAL Tt.• Coara,ter and reputation oewnich k .n icy Its lkitown in the market, r,s t!, need ernmlient • , v.lll - 11e,Slill'I'Ftlw A:7 s1:1 3 . tay - 11, 79: :t:n..k1:01.:,1.: . . 205 , : Walnut St., i9titagl3. Ins , ' . l)ii.,tne. St.. liroolton.i , .1;$ ' Trinity 'Nen • - ' 1 , 11, ; FOU ,B„'LLE • 1 . ,'. . -,- TLIE roLLow:xt) . 1 . - MINING MACHINE -Y. J 1 . Oue liigh.i,rjeinre Cornish mit. pum ,ing e,igine, i ..N.: Abel: eylinder„ 7-feet stroke, with 1,41 i. ~,. "1 ., all :; )i - its raniplete,ithcl 21ifis of wimps . 1 , 0 yards ench. ~ one .li-infh. the other 11-Ineh -plunger, each 7 Pena stroke. , , ' ALSq-One. NVloding• L'neini. :2-luell ey.lin ler, I ;feil..l. Iliki , . with dratn-;tearint. , ,,tudi.eleNcoinpliqe. .. it 1'...41)- 7 .F.hr sets I.lrenkerMaeliinel r. • A 1.,50-10:1 tli ref" traii tip.,pe Wilgon•„Les,vily ironed for .1-feet track. , , ALM..!-;-41tie I.7:gee( Fari and Engine, M . :W.4. tubtiLar ' 2 . Li/Ater complete. . - I. A.L .41 )- I Cillell,lll7ontal Pnin,pi lig Ene:ne."l9-Inel, • cylinder, 4,-feet.' stroke. with gearing and I.ols, and - -two lift* ;Of pumps., letl yard.; earn. with 14-Z4C2l.' .taungera,llo feet stnn , :is.' ' .. , ; The ien , 9ve machinery has oee.n in N1:1V1i. , ,11111 1* in good %I' i Trk ill g onler, . . .. ' OEO L9 GE W. KNICIW.II, Pat tstill, , , Pit. Jannary 9. 'lst---t;-..t fw ' i 4 . 414. I. :r -:-teal .• .. " a.""* *JULY PP 1 1 11'S 12- SATURDA Y MOkNING r •57 I$ lEM = El JOHN B. DOl - I'l . • \• it • v \ • c c • A GI:EAT VA t:ri:ry t)P, . , E 11 I 11 4 .,1 , A,N - 1 4.34.'it l 'iN I:!,1;. ,txn CrIF. it Tit; . • 14 tuit:-r 1.1 , :1it • nyi:N • . . . aoNEs S co.. .31anurat. t lip,l"ll.and 1 . • It•liot,,ite Arvh Crls. • ittnj.-5,4:,:73. I - NAN - FEL .11. _KARCHER, FURNITURE • WAREROONIS, and soutn, , ' Ili I"filL ~ I>i'7.!'ill_~. . . • I - 1 •r.., on•l, i - iz,to . dilaving gr,..t11) 1n.......v.t . dfdt.ii it les , ,I in tlo• :11 , 1::.i.,11 ”11 thv huge; four glory Imil,iltuf ad, I p•in int:. til, tortner , pla. - 1:• to tut , 10r , ..1... - ..:•ifor-Ir • reat in di.e. M.'llt. Co all pH rrilaArr. 4 Aunt t ur . .•toOi - .- ltinf "A nl. Ile i., .e.ddident of A.tAni.r, r.1./N. , :yer,ldea:.... at! 1 Arno tn,.3 f ;Nor iiPin with their ett,..tom, autt iiii,, ..x . , 1 ,, •:1,:.re of t enty year, in 1ut.1ne.,..4 ' N a guarantee 01 Lk ahuity to turn tott_tlii , Ic - 1 of work. lle er t,. I.• , •latly , ••11;!,• - r , . I I.1••. lli . la ,ve wo. - kadeq ...titi Il p utrar t!. !.• :lot on Patd will bedna - 1.. to orl->r at t 01"16-..: t. , r111,.... A t ta:ostoelr,''of all kind. of el:14 iTrIZE i '• on 13,11 I d const1:11. . . _ D. 211.. liAltr'llY.lt, '' • ::•••11,t.!. , ., to . •• - - .1-lytta - P r HE HYPERION HAIR CURLERS.I' ' i AN / NI , I.I • :::N•Ai.r. „k al 14'1.1: Foli . T/11'10 DU" , . ..-V • , Pr , :efth i/ .hi/p .qt/o, Iv":"., Thus ell nti . r is p tiy• ino , d. u - -• fry: 1 tiveliti. , n 0 er ,idlert . ,l to the pul.lie. It i - ..i . .,-4.y t,p.• m •etl, it - at la appearatieo. :did tilt not i r n!liti , :lie Ilair. ao. , lic:e i.... no iO't.t ti , .itiittil,u,,r an? ineta11ei,:id...1...it0!...711,..-41.t, 11.1 or br , rak•the Intlr , .. .4.;ri ut...r".ur. il I , tily, and f4d....!•:,';','" . • Nit ill I.S.AN d ( . .. 4, . - ..'':\••.t: Nrsrtit Foti rr ,4 Ki-tx;rt. - l'utt.Aol.:•4lltti.A..P.k, 5'.0,1 at' Pr, - 1tr.....1' , . °Trim tnitnr,..antl Ni(s ion !...,6 . , r 1,. ... N. It --•. , lnale lox - „! -- , ^ 1-0.a - t..; 3 Itoxe4s, ftssorted ` size.,l:‘ cl4:_ M!ItI I 11 t ree to an St.,.part .4/f dII e Usii test ` A • tat cs, upon re.opt.pf June It. ':ii-L•Ilt - tTIVION ' . . , • . .Lin aboVel'-tir.stid . to the at ti.ntiois of eistißttiner, the pre:wilt aeasrin, we bet lea% e to state. that .we hat e rande, Very great 'lmprovements ;In 1.11••ir ett ring during the isaat Winter,Viand !have no Ise,itaney in saying, they oh. Ow best I&rrija i-ltrt,et. nre front edrirtly eorn.feil Hogs: Wm .:tied very n Seely NO 11/14.0 111:11t• Wat.Nle Its rat ting as ii.=”llile. and fhe Itrgrecii ent pi, ti• rd .euring are the very finest to he had. 'fhe }Polo!. are all as ,iorteil before i.ici(lingLand each nizocuredi by itio 4 a,.‘ to vit.:Ude. ita tir.keep 4 ln Ko rare and not be toosalt' a great fault 'With 7111,T We ali..e.ettre in Ice Houses all sunitner. and titan ft:: ithh- the liams at all times cot fre.dn that were alive wall thli 6 weeks of the .4 nos the,llants tare ilelivertsl which "i 4 . great advantage and .ers t . p...,.essed by very few dealers. Wrs'retd sati,fled trial will invirn •atiisfaction: 'None genuine branded: Sold rdslv by A. t..cirEmsEtinonaii . paekerg, No. In N. IseLaware Atentie • Apt it PHIL Att)l:l.llP , A. PA. • SE F,N rE.III - CEN i- ••, • , . • VI RST MORTGAGE .BON OS, • UP THE 1,A5.7.1.-ii.t.r.,,ifAztr.ro:N.•,E 11.% IqI4.IA I D , ,Nl' AT ' AN6 I • : 1.1 • .XLI: 0:40111;1: v. - I,:.icg to nutLe I:uvc!Czavtit. itlvitett to exarnl t nit.fita of tnt..fr. I.V RS. Pnro ph:o s suppne:cl.rin:l ito rnn-ttion!•_•:i r 21)1) STEALING WILDINT.I/4N,, . .II nalic:al Aivmts; IIA) =•_ , .' , u.t . li Thl nil iStrok: PI I I LA PEI-pill : I. . . .0; • Gov...iuntexti I.3..Nuta anl whet Seri] rities iil kers lir enclni.nge rot I he- z\bovc• 1tt!.....t. market nitlk . ,iii.ril Z.;, .7+l •• . . 17-14,:ui • . . • . WILLIMSI D. ROC,E.RS,. ' N.- i , ;i. I_•_. . ' i. [I'ARRIA - CIE 'IL ILD'EIt.- MANrr..Arn7.m .: c4 l , F , i'!: r.Hrr..tiJ r: *ll r S C - 11'G S: C/iEsT.NI7'4rdEET, • . 1 1 ,41.12 WAiaiNS..; ANI) '"" PAY= - 7:11: ' , .O.A. 1), AN if PA lt K ' ..?"*.Ner sncl Eleznnt 'Styles of ftttriztn-es. eon ntly Aprit:ZAr7.l-Is-::m - k:•'IO,O ; sO_,(i . I:ARA.STE . k.. • I 'BUCK. COTTA COLORS, Preinstid enizeigi "sr kallallasi Cotta VS; Out , lltilldlassCrevarsdeserlptlois4.obec. do 4' Ttartialva dialerecit colors. Dorsals, Mew, I.Tutforas, sindlleitutlfol.shsaes. _ .• Octants cent by =MIN alarm • • Dkeia Orders mill lie Prorriollo inalsSloa krtha sosiwassil F,111!1.- palm= sitaill[Atig WK. Cot tosilbstd laarkst Wefts, AMA • 1 A N 0 THE • DELICA 7 4 . E SUBJ .ECT. ~ -, ••- • • . r P , liE -FA.CTi Which , there is nridenying, LL that there are to be amongst the remake n(lybeal•ea of Woman's Rights in this country,:stimeiSt•lhose reputation isrpositiVely bad,, and Itith'ers' whose reputation would bear-improving, has ntitnnnaturally brought ,some odturn on F .the whole movement, and this oili dm! is s'ornewhat increased by the be lief, Which litany people: entertain, that, owitigin ; the ehance of acquiring nottiriety which the !movement offers, the - number"of. such wonitin • engtiged in it is likely to fu-. ere* , e greatlY if It continue to spread. These charges the respectable agltatots meet :by'a plea whiehis. known to-lawyers as '"confer= shin s and avoitlanee;" that -is, they 'say: "True, hat what of,it? you. tnehi-in your ;4 polities, hive - tie - hesitation whatever in as:: *stilating on perfectly. friendly . terms with 'I well-knoWil protligates of your owa:sex,' , and think, youlrselves and - your work none the -worse of ,i.t 1 ndee d , -some of your ritptd fa mous,statesmen hive tx..en men kildissolUte Llives. Nt w; chastity . is - it law of tirtiverail. obligation just :If; binding, on one: sex as on' the other. c We;shall, therefore, net submit any hin-crH to the imposition of pains' and penalties for the ,violation of it on women -to which 'nett' are, not alsci exposed i ,: ft you wish uslti.lie iiartieular - aboat the=, company we keep, pal tit?ttset us a good example.— Until yeti lh,l so, 'we shall follow the good old - plan of ' :it'L'ipt L ing aid front any - quarter,' and Avill atialiti ev,iorybpdy to our platform who is willing to adhere te our doctrine and tireacii'it.',"rinsl:,the tirgumentjoe, which tile EngliAiwolOullivllls 'are engated in the disenssion of that SavolY subject, the Ceuta gioils Di....cases'Act; use,. freely, with the ' necessary i.lnOilitleation-i, and 'although as yet it, is btought . forwarti. , setnewhat timidly in this country, and oftener in private than inPtiblie,:We• !Live little doubt we shall-see it paraded before, long" n invincible,- and largo numbers of "strange women" Securing -under uover r ofi it-"spheres Of usefulness," Tr:OM WidOL. tooter the present _heartless . .4aial regUlatipuS, they are excluded. -fit. mie ,of the respeetah 0 section of the agitator-3'l're, -liowev er, tousei Us . apparently t kat this view , of.tliestihject at ;least needs defence. Mr. T. V. Rigginso ; ili a recentnumber of, &heti :Wom'AN's' Jon sat:, -utters a' ild - pretest . against bringing ' to. the work anything but - "elean,liandS, ' Ind deprecates the use,of the, plat fiirm,for the Irepair of dattaged repute-1 i dons or the 1 putging of old stains.. . Mrs., :-..ztowe has also iiltriled the brethren and ge ters away from the diseusSion of Matrimony . •aod kindred' stitljectS, feeling - conscious iip -patently that. the viewS of some of them on - these questions Chit hardly lie .aired "withdat giving () T ense. 1 But,•with all this, we be lieve we are . right "iv- saying, that from the iloctri ne' that "el Istity is a law-.or universal obligatioo, , ' , ivlli .h there is no gainsaying; the chaitipions . o iWoinalealtightS have de dueed, or ar,' fast: dodubing,; the conclusion Oda olie . of the thlin,, , s they may iawfutly2 do, in . ortlcrtOget these •"rights,' is to tmat fe iiiale.violations,or the law As no worse than inaltl.violat ions Of :it, and to disjegarAl,•a.4 of male invention teethe perpetuation- of male i , ty rtnny, the hid 'end universal usage : which , - lodges woinail's . honor in ,her purity. In, doing,th is, they are doing one of the things' Av il tell IlilikV Unlit in our eyes,' and that- of a' large portion of the vonimunity, mischievous people, and ntisehlevott s ,, in tile direet ratio . of their indivithial-wortitand influence, and in,s - tippiirt of thiS,VieW We shall resort once '• more to that plain speaking without :Which, ;•as we haye . already said, it scents impossible 'to iii=t-u- this qtatiori efficiently - Altlit,ugh it-is trtie that Chastity is a law of i i verssi Obligatipn, it is.not trite (Wit men's guilt ifi violating it Is as'great as. that of wo- Hien.: bectitisc the degree of guilt depetitis on the th•grei. - of teloptietipa 'which . in the ease ' of men i; very streng,b t oth• from temPera meta luni eircum;dancert, and in the case of. women very weals., Men's,pamions are fierce and active :. woinetits, feeble anddormant.— :..Nforeover, the wai,in• which the work of life has Ilei'l) divided Makes men's expOsure• to• temptation• constant ; women's, very rare. The race•lias, therefore; in forming its moral j t.olginent on the quality of•ofTeriees against sex mil purity; always treated the man's guilt • :us less. heihous %than the occasionally and • al flume!' tHI his ruleocs work .astot(ndiiig. injustßle, and has ealied.into ex ., is:totfik. that.great idot. on Christian eiviliza- I (hil l , the isobistdoo l led niale seducer, it does in 1 the vast inajotitV.Work what, We believe; is I in the courts of. roitiven, as well as those •of earth, reeogilizsil 4.,: . i4ibsta ntia I justice. The I jtlistinet ion lets, lhfiVever, a utilitarian as well. i its a purclyethicalbasis, and one no less ire-, I port ant .eertaitily. i'Fi Like Most other -of the . e.. , ..agi.skept up by Satiety for the regulations of- thee seves, it ilitis for. its object.. the maintenance- of:' the, integrity and. purity •of the family. lThe maternity, of a child is a' Iphy,-ieal... fact ; ‘'•iry.' difficult .of coneealtuent, ' hardly-- evt , rseecessfeicv concealed, and usual-. ly provable by Mani! witnesses: The paternity: of a child is, on teie other liand;:tirnply au ittleretwe which derives all its strength from the importance attaeinsi . th chastity by the ' female sex. .It rests simply and solely on they •Chiirocter of the mother. • It is incapable of. proof by. any- other testitnon,Y•than ,hers. Al! that is lino‘vn Aunt it is locked up iri her breast. and to weaken her scruples, there fore, is 'to throw dopbts on the ors= gilt of . all' her, Children : . or, .'in Other word's. to strike at the very roots of the 'ram ' ily organization. i if, we had things.' so ar ranged., therefore., that a Womah thotight no -- itiorepf violating Her marrige vomi,than a mat t , ,we • shottldl; ; probably • in a- ..very large part of the . world have either to give hip the family altitgOter, or shut women up, as they mire were Shot up. The inferen with - regard to the paternity of children, thi•refore, ha.: , to be jealously guarded„ not. only - 1.( 1 ,,....fit5,c. it. is in' the. nature of things W;-ak-. list . beeauSe ,it furnishes: what. li, in the pret.ent state of human nature, the main or sole inducement; to husbands- to toil and :teen al elute for their wives . and offspriitit. 1:tli, let -it .never' be forgotten, the husband must, eXcept in an intinitesitnallv Small iiit nil wr'of 'cases, be, everywhere the bread ,W inner. . Children Must always look to !their c fatlii , e for roost - of the arias with which they face the world: . - .S - ott 4 there'may cornea time . .Waen.• after having heard the requisite num ber of leetures,•atid read the requisite num . her ,of traers - , a man . will toil cheerfully for I the.. maintenanCe. and ;education of such - children as his: ife May see lit to introduce" - iiito'thelionsehalil, without cluing whether . they are , his own or not:. But we are still far away from ahy othsummation. Asittat:. .teN stand.. brutal Man will neither dig nor telye lot the supportjof any children which 1 e does not "pli.z•Ses..s a Moral certainty he has • !roeti I ett. Ile acquire s this certainty through" I 'his eolifidence in hiswifsoi phrity, apd aoei e4y lo:110.1 to justify it' by yffilingher lapse - from virthe with the:deepest - of eurthly dam rtat ions. . Icohe sure r the arrangetnetlt does. i'it work perfectly; ,but then the world Is full of imperfeetiohs; brethren.' . We know you would liav6, (trade . a for better world if you had bad a 'Chance, and irdoei seen( a pity that ,9 unatlY things. and eapecialty r •the . - relations of the ;.s.t.txes, and - the manner of perpetuating ,the species, should have been i settled without waiting for your appearance '-' or en)nsulting vein. .' Out then, von. must ad- Mit * , it .iSI he - Lti a's tioing, and. not aw sell ;,done as,ytiu.eou I have (lithe-it is et least' :unchangeable: • k ! - .. , i-, Inn we anti er Worse ch • to• Make against this. new„manifestation ( the rage for equality, and serietts one. Instead .of trying to level 'ii);,-that is to 'raise men to i the female standard - Of purityz , sthe agitators are actually, and nitnwt without - blushing:' trying to leVel ilOWnthat is, to put • wiinien On :men's' lower, iphine. - The necessiky- of associating' ing not to knoUli that they are scimitar*, is I toithe beat wren a horrible neCwsity. Women 1 lire .saved.' and to - their own infinite' gain,: 1 fitga having ttuderg6 anything similar , i with regard to. he .Ivorat members of their F Mtn Sex. :."We k ' W.there is often eruell*r in. the - exemption, bads - We- know, that: it 'hi an' . it tTspeakable support to:i - ittite. It might per .h.2.l*, tuivo'been better, as . we saillsome tithe! agtt, If matteis.hact been so. arranged ltiat:a man"might • hate thieves for his bosom; filendit, whiteentertaining-obeaity horror of Wit.. also itilmi#ht. Penults. have been': t ter if matterlbiu been so ( arranged that i leitinight 15 pmstltutes Ntlitit thenviiree-, Iy. t their ho . without losing a, particle of heir horior.9 (epee( . Providence has man-: , itg the ittrair dire:tinily. - leihai made, as. 1 i• is otorious , the aVoldartee, of had company: .n of the gnriateet aids and one of the chief ~ e 0 • tilt ions of right Citing.' Women are' for tu ate enough tclitittatite to - avan themselves i Of lit iwthe•cultivatioa of tho k greabeat of all! their virtues, an ' thelmost useful.. .4.1 a Ow ' ;I:ray:el)" angel that they throw thia'. aid i away, and ditpla fort the morals and. inius.;.', ne of their fe ow_twomen that .heintifid; -in lifereneewtheir brothers 'and- haw; •bads Show fo re'liMictiemoi of the Maks in the: Whitton ' . igliedisie r isivolt .to her:toe - 4:oo4itki • -of mond -Wftei f e o i . th t, when we : . I in - the , eves in sin sad, after s . 1 'y's:, orit among Mile, seat-, 04.1trit. • is ga and eh -,- she lizmr meet, - ent- sWeet; MI e.. Cora Pearl. .. ::dhitingtdsbeeteikotte, Mi her . - friend ~;,;. - D0d0 . ,,1he, - brilibitit- • • ~ blioqiptil , ;' s Peni . prietait"Of the , - iiiii4.4 , "n ,.. ev ii• e ,. r atn a * l ; bogi 3 m l- e 6 e .4 ioriil' son as ftatft tit is oar ix)tt: j: - .• 4: J. - ' - ...1: : - - z . • '; ._•1 ; oil: , .titiattiMeital, . ..however, thsiSitha: ... • iAtandard• • ' • ; prevails itztaitittbC I •-•Ir of the i l r ' ' Wilda; agtOlbe-pw i l ea don they taltp;: ' its maintothaneeitire.. .'l • -' '• . : .1 , -2 , - - - , c • .: =I MI ME 1 1 'among thlimost preelotts ac.hievanientiorciv ` ilization—lhose of whieh mankind may most justly heptund. Uwe were asked to - point oat the most: Itupresstre indication of • pro greiw.' we Should unquestionably- name, not the delivernnee of women from the bolts, and bars, and letis of the hiretn, but . the com mission to iheir custody of their own'purity,- 'and the isi ignlar 'fidelity with which, they have fulfil xl the trust • We doubt, too,lf . arlYthingi as done haitas much for the. die-. ' Vation of en as the lisison which every Man learns f his_earliest years from them of what is - Ible in the:field of self-restraint, `And one ofl the very best- things we know 'about mensthe.painslthey take to keep the. l iinseeltly,br the p "es base or degrading side 'of life ! from.and. ears of their wives and daughters, and sisters.'. Women, it _is true, ttitve.done itt le for the - World by their Minds; ibut they halve done an enormous deal by their I ;manners; it exemplifying, day by day,. Vit. , . tues'of whi 11, 'in their'Absenee, • men would ;oitiydream The neketask to be undertaken by. them Is he introduction among men - Of their stand rd-virtue; land suit—even for the 'ilike:of shi in" fin the edifying wrangles .of the caucus nd the court•Nonv—the - adop,tion of men's: ThA, valut of their Contributions :to polities is - a Matter of pure speculation ; i we wereto;,udge - from what they have d Already, We should s a y it would be v; ry sm 1.. l : The value of their contributions_ t morals,. happily is a matter of e* xrienee.e There is. j tim no man to wlt some Woman II . not proVed a second Cm selenee, and it. will . ' a sorrow -Int day for t umanity when we see men 'and women in the market7place and * the legiSla 4nre encouraging each other—to use, , ,the chaste language-of O.distinguiShed male. pop , - lician 'and [philatithroPist--.-.!'net to he tbo &•Mined 'Serlipulous," ' -I' ' MALKIN' .4 ND CLIIMING FISH. • . . , • . ,f., _ -\ - rrE.l.ltl - , two - years. ago a paragraph i i appeared in the ler..t . stre.vrED Lamm:: • New's, stating that Dr. franeei Day, thewel I known Indian ichthyologist, bad transmitted i to the Zook Jail. Gardena a number cif . " walk- S.:", • ing fish We learned that' they started by i the March ( 86S) steamer from Madras; but ' although; weilregnlarly•read the list of paisen gers:and arrrvals by the l overland route; we never heardlanz; more:of the fate of these •fishee,until the prwe.edingsbf the Zoological r Society far 108 : happened to come under our notice a .fea.tdays ago. ''As; probably, few. of. our readers study these iiroceeclings; we will give a 'brief idistrat,t, or Dr. Day's explana. tianof the Ifittilte-and - diannerS of the singu lar crt! , attiies in.clikestitist.i ~ • • In the llrsti place. we May observe that of' the *nlneteeni, speeinienti ;of.opl.gocephalidie,' or, ',walking fishes,'! that started from India,• ofily six arri .ed alive iit the place of :their destination, • n the • t•list.'of Mav ; and these were not in I conditicin;and did not long survive. i Most lishel respire the:air which is held.ln* solution in the water by. which: they are sur•-• .rounded, and, except in , special eases, find i.ti m thhisupplys • dent, Itut there others which* may be call* "copoithil 'breathers, which never obtain for any length of time from 'the water alolle, but require it - direct and un— diluted from Ihe atmosphere ;;,and, however cool and welliaemted the grater in,ay be, these others are, if unable to inhale free air, simply drowned. T eSe.phenainend are Mere easily seen in : Indi than in *England, in eolse= qfience of tit' ,ditrerengeof temperature ; hut li even 'here, in ot.surntiler, weither,earp may .often be seen with the'rnouth out of water -and open; wh ile the gilltiare at the same time Nii. , constfint motion, Leriehes and some other ilshes, chiefly inhabiting, the mud at the hot tem of ponds, sometimes rise to the surface,* and, instead of inhaling, expire u, bubble of : i air which luu , doubtless had itsioxygen mere or less abstri ed, and Was no . long,. r tit for , , respiration:* lk ore often, hawever, the? , e fi shes rise to the ?face towalle* air, some of .t_ which passesth, in ugh ithe intesline;and is discharged b the' vent, the mucous nie brittle of the - i i i ••-'s mentarY-canal thus acting as an ass istant r iratoryitnembrape.' The air thus discha . has been analysed, and found to contain an xcess of earbonicncid in place of oxygen gas just as bi - the casein ordinary exhaled .air. •. it India,,Dr. Day has pot ob served,this st nee procesa. or intestinal res piration, •Th purely . water-breathing fi - heS.S. - can live•with t rising to the surface, nfile,'s . under special licumstanees, while the corn- !_pound breath rs expire after', a longer "or shorter period Mr. -.lkiekC., whose singular. researches on he nest of the crocodile were noticed . in.a 4- 'enthunibei of the Zootof.4- tusr, 'placed a r breathers as he terms the eonijxnnid Lire tilers) and water breathersin the same age rium, acros,4 which, an inch below the writ •r, he plitee I a diaphragm-of net, ISo•that th • fishes einild not rise to- the surface. The result WaS that, 'the water breathers. 'MO Dr. Day obseryes that the ditference in tly kind or.breathing of the, two but eses of tislit , is very .apparent when they . are lying side. y -side op the moist sand at the bottom' o an auarium.: • The water. • breathers'keep their gills in constant excited , motion, while cite compound breathers scarce- - ly move their ills, hotat intervals , rise' to the surface; o n their Mouths; and take in :air. Dr. Jerio 1, a well-known Indian natu-e ralist, kept so eof the Climbing perch,tana rl bas scandensi j 1 an aquarium, and - .observed that, while the -were generally very shiggish, they would, e ely, now - and then make• a ...spring to the t. i, to obta in a mouthful of : after:which th r dashettdown - again to . the bottom. • . ' •:, I- . '' ' - ' I in 1fr366, :he engaged in carrying out ex perimenter byo rder of. government, on. the introduction of fishes frOm the plains to the waters of the. Hills, Dr..D„..,- Is: i :certained that - 'the walking fishes and WI e.., other genera co t uld he carried 19r long:di - lances in water mixed with', mud; wile • ' if the water were pure, they soon di :- The solution of this spparently rernarkatt e..phen ornenon; as affcrded by a series of ingenious experiments w e tich ' he. subsequently Made, show's that th • tishei. respire air directly 'from` the attno that thetphere and • not through the ' gills, and' therefore , the muddy water acles.noe pass thugh theseorganr; and, fur- :-• thee, that the m dis of direct send& towardi -, decreasing the itationto which tile ashes were exposed w 'en traveling In vmseis cOn tainitig clear w ter. .• -•.• i • .- • Dr. Day has' llected a number of instan ces of the migration of .fishes by land from one piece of water to another: 'Mr. ...Morris. the;government agent to Trincomalee, ina letter, to Sir Emerson Tennent states that is the' tanks dry trt, the lishea - congregate In the little pools in which only• *tome thick mud-is left; and as the:m(sl.4llre evaporates, , '11'0:: crawl away in hundreds in every de-, rection. in Search of fresh ',water. He has seen, them at astanceof sixty .:yards from the:tanks, stills ling Onwm.d over the craeke and Ind en tations i of dried mud.. :Sir John . illowring datesp that in SIAM, he saw i aigg "fisbeti leaving 'the ricer Meinarn, gliding • over the wet banks, . and losing themselies among the •tre6l In the jtingles.'' He also states; on flui-aurity Or Besholi POlllioix, • that some of th travelling:" Ashes,' can wander more thin a league .rrom:,the water. We have the u dotibted, evidepeeof many Europeans that, the climbing perch can travel by land, tat, all events ,for short die-' tames, such mi. ticin.aStrally s'oCettering in •the.early morni :, when the dew is on the . grotind. • Mr..E. s - LaYard once met a num- 1 !viol .. .perch-like fishes,-probably tb# amebas, travelling along hot and dusty-gm - Vol road at midday. :• - •.i • - -'_.•,-- ' t •31r. Day discu • •ss at eonsiderable' length 'a ..vexy.curious subj .t. ; which - 'has. never been clearly.' explai . • . , naMely r j the sudden . ap pearance, in veil . us- parts of India; of large heavy, adult Is es, with . others •of ,propor .tional sizes, im ..ediately. after a; 'heavy .fitil ' of rain, In situat ohs Which have been per feetly dry and h • for Months. •Afterishow ing the fallacy 4 Yerrell'i• theory of the sudden :viviflcat .n of bra' by the rain, be points out the most ;CR inty Of the phe nontenon being . eto !the tiration of the rt44.s fishes during .e dry season—a process closely analogo . - to the hybernatton cif , 'many genera o &shell Would predispose ' them to astate o torpidity, such as Is known to occur I.fi-the dt . season in Some animals, •as the, lepidosorin; certain- crocodiles, &c. That many of then are capable of burrow ing. •is easily - nby watching their pro-' ceedingit in an.aq urn where, irate water, .be disturbed, ors they be otherwise alarmed, certain loaeltell a d various other fishes dive at ace; anti - y disappear . by burying tatmri themselves In th sand.' The pectoral - fins are the agents fishes employ he this pro ecw,:,. That they actually do burrow,. is ha.: contestably pro by numerous olservi:- tion.k.: 'he thysliswhaabeer(found : where w sank; in Certain parts of the W Iltdiell. - An, final* was obtained c iott ea t _by Sir tome& that hail been dug Out et dried u - tank a foot ands half "below turfireet and be waa informed by , n.. , .Of i undoubted, veracity, Mr. „it ' Wit) that . tad ~ .been - _tyke - .pigment why ulllage were engaged In :digging . up He d • bed 'the ground a* tirm and hard and fish .0 *rbeiutfull-ginwn (about. ; .t andjamping on the bank when to , • light. .-..' We I-•'• ' . • • tV er ticie with a few -*Mk. ' Abe. slim . pg . (stubs: scan tisnep-4; Ihr flaklreally• . illeocrve • the names ' -Utilise_ 1 the eicender or scandena : the Clint 4 . ', ..Irr dem Out childhood we have 40441 44 admired pig :91' this Pen-b.... lime het .hlgh upi a taw the river aid.. Are i , lhassitilafl of siteptichat. - .. _ratlti•jo .. .1% down ft* WC Pebbif i t - posititin. ;For' the. .carlieSt recent - of ' its climbing, propensities we are indebted to two 3 lohammedan travelers,, "who visited India in - the - ninth 'century, and l ieft a record of their observations, which has been transla ted into • French by- - M. Iteinaud. S They ,inention which, leaving its natural, element'ellinbett eocd.7.-nut .trees and drank the juice of the-plant. _After an . interval or a _theinsand , ‘Years, - .Lieutenant Daidorf, in 1791, Wrotele.infortn Sir Joseph Banks that: he had observed this fish,. five feet from the ground on • .the steni of. - corroboration ,of statementi, the Tamil designation cif Iltbi thil is panieri, a "climb er of palmirii;trees,' in Malabar and else Where the. natiVeS . ; hilly Geneve in its Climbing - powers. qn the other hand, • itel- Ther Buchanan,. the . ,mithor.of "The Fishes. ' of the Ganges;" nor Cider, author of -"The 3ialayan• Fishes ;" nor Sir Emerson Ten nent - cOuld`tiOd any'direct evidence of these poiv- Crs, nor did" they ever bear them noticee•-by, the natives of.the Malay ,peninsula or Cey lon. • Dr. Day. does . not give, a decided opin ion on the subject, but,ilic - observes that the climbing perch p,osriessei: such .• jumping powers that it cannot be - kept in en. aquari um, units the top be cov ered' over. ',With out this . pre‘..4emlon 'it will contrive kgeseape, even whom: the *veils a foot or more from . _the top. " ! •• - , Dr. Day We believe, - still engaged in attempting to stock; eithef by, means. of ()Va• or young fishes; some of the principal rivers of India; anal hasalready pnblisited•inte or .two offleiaireporis 'of his pipgress. 7 -,' A11,,t/u: Year, Rotairl..: : • _ . . 'VHE ',Bosrozi TliAvtaxtitt, publishes a Coriespondenee from4apan, in which occur the:followrog pleasant passages: NicitS . C.lll", Humau naktuti: seems to be very:nearly the • same all , o.ver •thi!' earth, and no mike have. any chaminerlsties for,: which counterparts cannot be found •In every othei race. The Japanese, as rude and_ unpoetical as -they seem to be; have theirfalries; genii, Pens and imps, auliwering tliose of which European jutet . lleS tell suelLtrobderful tales: - Some of these stories-.are: very ingeniousoli:would bear copying: into the fairy lore of, America, while others'weuld be far from aeceptahle, Diving to the great itiffereticesin customs and irligion:. Tdo not. know, that .the subjeined' tales, which were told by tt Japanese nurse to the - . European children at ,llitigo, some of -whom Were under her. charge, are. real4t a • „part ofJaPariese folklore, or made - up for the ptesenthmusement of:the Children; Ent in either ease the . children Were pleased, and .when they-repeated some of the stories to me, they were very etithuslastic.in the . praise of. the old liipanest - grandmother wbe had thus entertained therm,. ; • . , . yitF. LITTLE toir . .wito. prtpa) A Tettml.. `,.Skinee. there was ilittledapanese boy dressed itra,niee suit of black linen,,and , he Said to himself, one day; "I will. be a great Daimio, I will have _big swords arid fine dress, a my. motherand , ftitheraltall be happy With len ty - of rice and jewetrings." Ilut Nit lit e boy was poor; and allheitailwas thitt.one . nit of f r elothes: lip Was-ivalking on the side of Fit- siyaina one day, thinking hoW he Should be j great, when•the ',mountain shook tend Freat .smoke-devils tame Out Of the top. -:The: boy/ was ',afraid, untilti- little . fairy, awakened by the noise, rase up-at-his feet, - and taking hinil by the hand ledlitu away from .the moun tain. ..When the:little , spirit was about to - leave,.the boy said, "You know how to ware me froth smoke-devils; pad you must. know bow to make the'..a great , Dalmin. Will you tell me?" !`Go and pull a turnip," said-the fairy-spirit as. she. tiok her way back - to the Saered. mountain. -:So the little boy lOoked about ban for a 'Orden,. and when, he had found . otie he-searched for a turnip. He sornr . found a &mt. one with • tall - leaves,, and he set about .diggiag"around,the roots. ,--"No, iio!" said the turnip, "my, root ig deep and dead, cannot dig-so low, hut take bold . of My , head, and. pull; for-My root will. folloii''wlibre my head 'goes. :So he seized . hold of the stalk and pulled. _Lo ! it . came •op fie.' easy that the boy feltover in the mud. "Ho f Ho -L`' . laughed the turnip; "you have something-to learn if you would be a great Paiinio. Jleji, like turnips, pull easiest by the head, but you, -had better leave thenr whete,they have taken root thanto overturn yourself In pull ing theta , tip." And the boy toKkAhe adVice and tgadA, theactjuaintlineeof leaders Only. 'He waswer er however, over-adzcious to be in the pompany . of great men; and' 'soon -the Tycoon, seeing • h is greatea re and iviedom, made Willa prince, so he was happy: . -. ; • - , , . . • . 61111.. THAT 1)11) NOT 011EY. . . • Once a little girl Was told -by her niotlici . to make Hee cakes.' But 'the little girl wanted M play shtfttle7cock; and left' the dough in the bowl: - A little Imp in the shape of a frok came, and when the girl Was about to hit the cork a blo*,.he . threw the dough:lnto the air. It fell. upon the girls head, and 'streamed down over her shoulders until she was en tirely covered. Aler mother enure, and, sup- . posinot all dough, threw her info. the oven„ and so thenamglity littlegirl was.ba keit* THE INDUtirMIOUS MAN One man worki;l: in his rice _anal wheat fields, while his neighhors-spent their' tittle in wrestling; drinking Sacky and playing; Lall. Finally Winter eame, , jtnd they have:no food: :So they went,tii the industrious man, and said,. "Give its riO.and bread," But the other :said,. "' ,Nl4 . you serve the spirit of amusement, I Serte the -Spirit of:.work. Go to-your spirit for fOod, and - ,I will go to wine." So they all starved_ ' - 1 • . IN TUE .- , k(,;(7l.—The .het liar . s'eareely , set on: the - leg); twelve flours when we already tefdiseoverin it srjme lineaments of the .head and.the EadY.Of the chicken that how be' born: The ' , heart ap- , pears to beat, at the'•end 'of ',the 'day ; at the end of forty7Cight hours tWo!vesieles.of blood can be distioguished, the:pulsation of which IS very . • 1.. • At the fiftieth hour au auriele of the. heart appears, and resembles M ajace:Or noose, folded dowri•upoti - . • • ' At.the endof seventyhouts we distinguish wings, and on the head two bubbles for the brain,. one for .the bill; and two others—oue for the fore . part. and one.f,or..the h . part of the . bead.. The liver appears towards the fifth day. , • ' - At the , end' of one ,hundred- and thirty one hours the . that voluntary motion is obs • At the vnit of one hundred and thirty:, eight hours the lungs and' stomach become visible; At the end of one•hundred and forty two the intestines, the loin 4, and. the upper . • The -seentli-dat that whieb '-yias• slimy begins to luvie consistence. ' ' - • •At the - one hundred-pant - ninetieth hour of incubation the hill opens arid the 'flesh 'ap- Pears in the breast.o.: , ; .• At the one hundred" and i nioety-fough the sternum is, seen t that . is to • say;- the hserist bone. •- • ! ' • . .. . At the 'two - hundred and tenth ..the ribs" come out of. the'back; the.bill is very visible as" welt 'as the gallbladder. The bill becomes_ green at the end of. twci hUndred and thirty- six lidurs, and if . the :Chick is taken out of its eoveripg, : it eVidetitlYmovc. . The feath ers begin. towards the two hundred and fortieth hour, and' the skull-becomes griSly. At the. two-hundred. and forty-sixth hour the eyes 'appear.. - ' . Atthe-two-hunt eighty-eighth the. ribs are perfect. , . - At thethree,h4ded ad„thirYfikt hour the spleen draws • near tthe stomach, and lungs . lun to.the -chest. , - •.- -• . At the end• of . threc h I !Aced and thirtyt t tlVe,bouss the . billfrequen ly opOks and shuts;- and at the end of four I qedred and fifty oneil. hours or-the: itightee th day, the cryof the chick is.almady heard—it after Wards get more strength.. and growl' continually, till at last- it sets.itself_ at liberty by opening the Priam In Which.it; was'shut . up. '. • - Adorable wiedtkuief.God! it is by so many dlffirent .degrees .the creatures are brought Into life.. All iliglie, progressions are made by rulel„and there. is not one .of them-with cast sufficient. resson,:". No pa*t of its 'body' mild ',appear. sooner or litter, without the whole embryo . StiffeEing, and e a ch of Its MOM appear at the most 'prope r moment— This ordinstion,So wise, and so invariable in the production of the animal; is manifestly the work. of a . Sul:Tema Belo& ... Sot's contemporary: In the course -of an article on ,"breacti of promise" advano the - somewhat novel upinkm that what are termed - - l'eugagements" between young perionsof opposite seles have no bind ing forte, and that therefore such snits are generidly instituted by LatileOfquestionable socialdending for the'purpose ofgaining no tottet3r, and.• the hope o(pecuniary -‘"Ari empuiturent" says his authority - , -Ma merely a period of probation. A man who eaten irttonne In faith - is a scamp, of ccatnar,..trat has Sada himself mistaken, and/Joel** retrieve itwhile he may. he Is a fillet siettheervar a termigant for a wife. If this wnerere ecirnictly understood firm, a breach we shouldsel: detai of that roaring legal of promise Case.", - • - • * Dssar Sertini likens time maned ' to put, a tax on female beaqty;:atid_to leave - eveey lady to tate her einiehartas;', , He mid the witatakb,asertictrbr.o44',so4 would tle vertiMoluetlie. SINGLE cOPI,EgI.,SIX,;: CEINiTS. Fr HE AIWANTAGES OF. Tal.:ll'rkL.--- .1. Wrlting_frorn.Europe,..a eorrvspenilent or the Toledo BLADE atis discourses: . "Tlre . . advantages. of travel are: many. A • Wandering 'person Is no fool. -How the con ceit iti taken out of one. when le inutgined he ' knew sercnuch I_ The zuart.tlntratandsat the Street earner knows. more. of human nature than 'the philosophetibutin• by - brick walls. Travel has a bearing:Anon practical life. We I study ttte werhk best in the World; -we are . disciplined by coming - in contact with the world. All - true ,Men are not found within laboratories .of learning; the-finest hbllshed Marbles arethosr. 3 berieath the waterfall, and not in the sculptor's warchouSe., If you are -a first-rate traveller you will be conatantlyin 7 1 curringhbligation*. Locke said he attribU- ' ted his ,learnitig to not, being afraid ask for Infoirmation. Our questions In Euriape - .• yere . generrilly elieerfullyiand explicitly alt-' swered. • - We' were sorry to see :A.inericahs abroad who - se... , enteil rot to be after Internet _, - tion, - but to give it and make a display... - Sarre - travel in a box, °thee* . in a bandbox; stnne; - are exquisitely fitted eitt,othersAti,e covered . wi'ii, a triacadem izolirress—too many travel -- to :-.udy the, in illionalres and not the millions. You meet those who hrve hi - Lich vulgarassur-.. an --....., and w ho appear, like Atlas, -to hold the , Wo.'d on their shoulder*. They are the very --, 1, ere-zeendo of brags. They would have for-.. 1 eig ers think that they were sent out as•spe chi! ambaders by - tlceir-government,- and' are constantly Annoying - the British. with . their deinands for the settlethent of the _Ala barna claims, and.speaking sneeringly of Brit ish freedom, juStice and,power, They appear norcertain of holding their office long,: and.'f aregoing• to make :the most - of - their - little •• ' brief.authority. Others are-like the boy who,- looking at the equestrian • statue of t'ornwal; ~• lis,- in the - tower. Of Londoti, asked the bea-: Ale, 'where is his sword?' • - ~ •1. . ..' "Others. are like the. English. lady Who, . while walking one beautiful evening -on the . streets of Edinburgh, was Asked by-a' corn- - •-panion what the thought of the Moon, and replied, 10 it's retie-fine, tut' no such 4 moon.: as we have in Lerffion.'• They are - never sur-• . prised at anything: :U LM .avalattehe houn d fall at their feet it wouldn ' t startle II ria.•—,- 1 -Everything they see Is whippedr:int - sha7,-.. . vings when: compared with-with-' , home-:4) sights:: •,... Yea hate heard of the- AMerfean Whp,. on It lookingwitlia native upon Mount 'V'esuviu*,--. and being asked if. they could beat that: in :'' - America, witf an air, of pomposity r4plied, - • 'Of course we/Can, we have a waterfall that -- would. - _mt thattAnt 14 no tittle.' Others tray- v- • el in Europe oh their.. pile 'and style.-- 'Th: - fever of display,' mile°. W„. Curtis says, ton-, sumes comfort.' The wealth of a citizen-in -Lapland Is measured by, the 'number' of his - reindeer. This class of tra'vellers is not sod s able, and' often exhibit extreme incivility to- . wards their countrymen with less preten-. sions.. They are too careful- of their digiii: - ty.. They seem to say, now dtin't-be too fat • miliar beeause I condescended to reedgrilze y 4311 - As a rule u Marquis or-a. duke is.inore". ' urbatte and easier to approach than a littronet oe.a knight. , So ; we say, if We are going to Bile'an-aristocracy in-• A merlca, let those holding the rank be educated in. the days- and acquire the graces- and kindneses Of the •".' solid and . best representati-ccs of aristocracy in Europe. 'AS it is now, many Americans - who claim to representthearistoeracy of their-. • country lack the gentlematilitiesS and lady- , like retin vtten.t that the"positioik involver,." • VEz CANAL.-,—You!are httereided In the. Suez Canal; and as I have passed • tlfrougla it, and made every inquiry I could from persons well acquainted, I. have now" a good knowledge of it.. -It is 100 English =tiles 'long from sea - .to sea. For 40 miles •" from the: Xortft- endifis . 3001 feet wide and - feet deep in the middle, then, for 10 Milo*, it is but 150 itnd 100 feetiffoin-Shore to shore, 21 'feet. deep, and • that4l.ll3fi'iri the cent re; like an ordinary graving dock in shape-I-sloping : 'sides—in this part. is - very -imperteet. It .htos several euryes„Very 'difficult for large strips„ unite tin neeessary also, as the • inifure of the grounds admits of its being perfectly straight ttiroughent. - From- Ismailit (the., httlisyity,— thwti ). the canal is for - tkiOnileS straight; ex cellent, wide,. iihtl — tWenty-six feet deep. • Then come the Hitter Lakes—ten miles i long,, • five broad; and twenty-six feetlleepthrough-' but.- This lake was formerly. the head of the -Rtd. Sea, but had been •dry for centuri?s ' till the canal again filled it. -- 'From.the hikes to • Suez the canal. is finite, fibished and nearly, straight, with 26 feet ..of Water; titereforeat i is 'past 'that, except -the tert miles . thi.7 . centre, where there is now but 21 feet in a . very narrow channel, There 'are - 2 feet - throughout the canal, and in three. months . there will .be 2'3 feet where' how it is 21: .Front Istitaila„. our: ship, 2,500 tons, drawing 101 feet, in a flaw of wind,: ,Whieh ',took her cti,..rn,- and prevented front answering her helm quickly- (at we were being towed,) :- Stuck her bow info the mud, audafter break & ing three nine inch hawsers, we - had to dis-'s charge 200 tons'of coal .and'Bo tons of water from •thehollers. :We were there two nights - • anti a day. It .. a risk, for a ship of this i size - to Ise her own-- - screw at the curves,. as her stern may swing against Otie.side and break • tilt fan. This has oceuered... From,. Suez t 6 Biter Lakes, thirty miles, therels tirise and d far 'of tide t.f . dsix feet ;:.but -Abe tide loses it c fin the- lakes, and ! , toE. affect thtt -of the canal.. Front i-lantailit to, Port Sa. fifty Miles, the is u'Yeryclight.strearn,' under half-a mile-an t In*nlways.. On the whole,' the canal willhe greatiueets_ when_ • -the middle ten' miles are ;straightened; 'widened, and. deehened -*trotn twentyotte to . twenty-three or 'snore feet. .or £3,000,900, ttre canal can be widened ,double its present .1 .width in two years:, Tile-present contractors Would undertake it if the.: Governments in=• terested would help them with hinds - , Then' it - would be a splendid, work; but. even at its.- prescht Width it must-be the future highway , Eastward. Ships pay eight. shiitinge.a ton and eight-shillings far each passenger' This ship pays ILSOO in canal' dues. ?As for any dilliculty- from deposit, or editing, or blow- , ing sand; it is too trilling-GI be noticed.' , • •threc will always occur, but to-nc(trouble some extent. .The.sidei ttif the cabal ;mist. be dyked with stones.. If is partially so now; .• and trees wilEbe planted along US •margin i • as Well as grass,. reeds, and things that - will . bind the bankit. The country ..on both sides throughout is the, most artd,.dry, desert of sand,, devoid of nil life; vegetable- or- animak , Adtantage has been taken of several eld dry . bedi4 of lakes, whichs the canal has now • again tilled with salt • water. The. canal- is . now the boundary •betWevn Egypt and • 'Arabia, and consequently . between Africa • and Asia. :It is splendidly coneeived, badly traced in the centre - portion, but most sue ceed I think have told 'you enough of the 'canal. Le , .1. - sePs, who conceived the -,..: canal, was not an enginett, but Prenpli Cori sul lit Egypt.—Loadoit. . - • . - . CA tiTELLAR 4 - ES LINOLN.—In , his'. great . speech .On Emarleipation . in the Spanish Cores, Casiellar mad e the fol lowing" eloqu en t• , reference to:Lincoln : 1- , • ." • ' - • 1 I beg that you. - will pause a moment to • ' coesideethe man who cleansed this' terribfi: stain which obscured the stars of the,Anteri can _banner. I beg that yOuL:will- pause a . ' moncent,•• for his immortal mete has been • • invoked-for *the perpetuation- of slavery.- - • Ah ! the past; 'century,. has ,tiot, the centurY " ,to come ...Jill not have,ia figUre • so grand, lie cause as evil.disappe-tr-4, so disappears hero -isin al:sp. I have - contemplated and deserib- • ed his life. . Born in a cabin of Kentucky, or • mients whs_could'hardly.read ;, 13oron new • Moses in the'solitude Of the desert., whereape . . forged all great and obstinate thought:s, - RM- nototious like the desett, and, - like the des tiert sublime; ,grotving,up "amorig - •those pri-•. - aleval- forests, Which, wIW'• their fragrance, send a cloud of incense, and-v:lthithelr mur- . 'anus, a - e.loud oil prayers.to heaven; • a beat- , man. at .eightyears in the impetuous current of - the Ohio., mu tat seVcateeti in the, vast and • tranquil . waters, ,v of the:Nfississippi ;. later, a • . weodman, with x and arni felling the int- . memoririllk way' to 'open a wa to unexplored region's for'l4sltr be or A r• antlerin tVorkers; reading. no utile ~- book- than the-Bible, . *the - • book' of great somiiis a Ilia great hopes, dicta- .- tated often bY o'4i - bets to the sound of fet-. • • tors t* , :dmggedAhlrough. ; : Nkneva. and Bab- ... • ylon; schildof nature, in-a word;by one of • thosc'tniractes:onlvi comprehensible among . 2 free peoples, he fought , for' the country; and Was-raised by hts fellowLcitisensftO the eon- grass at - Washington, and by 3 :titenatien to th e .p res ideney of . the Kepublici.; iMt.wheri :.the evil wew more- virulent, : When 'those . ' States were dissolved, .wherflhe slaveholdees : ! uttered.their , war cry_ and stheldavet their 1--., groins of despair—the woodcutter t the boat - : -'-' man-, the son of the great West„;,therlescend- ..';' ' ant of Quakers, humbles; of the' humble be= fore his conscience, ', ! af the . greatte-,: fore historyraseends Lb 'Capitol, : the great- .' 7eat ea; moral 'height of o ' titne, andatrong and . serene with his conscienceandhbs thought ; • . -before him a veteran army, hostile Europe behind him, England favoring the South, Trance encouraging reaction hi 31 . esico: in hands the riven conn.try:_f he anus '2. 00 9,0 00 of men,g. ather71501:1;000 . horses, oends It „tiling 1,28 - miles in *meek from the banks : .: of . ate Potattiat to the 'shores Ler Itinnenee; ...- . filftta mare thin 600 - battles VAnewa before Richtinntti th deeds•Of - .4.lexande _,r of Cater; . . at :1,. a ft er, . having :• emancipated _ 5.000„000 • - Ida'-tai, , that nothing might - be wanting, he Om-, in 'the. elm. moment of idetory- { site, ''. ~. - Cliritit,ilke Soetater, . ,like all redeemers, *at - : the foot of his" work. - L'"fils work t Sublime ' ~ , aeldivement. t-trier which huminitY. . shalt. _ Atteli 4 / 7 , -eketi Ibs , tears, and God ' - Or hew „ dicgonar;"-*.:' , :'.- ' ' !" 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