The miners' journal. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1870-1873, September 17, 1870, Image 1

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    SIXTH
Port Niclimoti
Pier No. 4, Port nai'
D, R ICIE.
hippere of the Besil
C'anl SCIIGYL
W E
II A.Mt3K
-c•
'GENTS 11 , 08 TILE,
NUT" ' and otl
LOCU!
PI NE
AND VEIN,BIT
CUMBE
'205 Walnut at..
tit Broadway, Ne,
I. 11l I.uane Strke,t7
Ornces :-.'
Jan. 1
• ' .No. 5; Fort
HAASI & • 'l3
• • _ Miners and Shipp
,TIRE StrPnmq
TUEIKY Rim
P,Ar. AO*ICTS cw,
• co 'rated
PLANK RIDG I COAL
/
Offlee i
fillTrl a n i fi n y t l4ldln 2: lPh i li t ' rit;•
. Doane SL, I Ikfato -
.Pf.•ll ID, 70 , ' • f - •
•
k.:ASTNER, STICKNEY I•SE' VI ELLINGTON.
MiOersond Shippers of Coal.
lurlNKil*, from their Burtiaide-Col,. at Shamokin.
1• LEWIS VEIN (Red A.iih.J i
I,OCUST 401:STAIN (WhitiefaahL)
4 :41: Trinity Building.
1 T2O Doane Street, }Boston
, WIIA I7 I , 6,•PORT RICUMO --
•. • Jan. 1,, I
Pier 7, Port itichm
‘ilM ., . •.
:
~ :irs Of Ail Utraci & _
!I • , 0
C 0 .A. h
slfor the Sale of the?:elebrat
17Y, WIGGA'S ATR EBEL't
Itirnside Shamokin ' I
-White A.R•ll, l ' r .oo 41.
Ip• • I -
PORN and PEA :II MOLNTAIN
1 13.04 ASil. 430 1 a! '
FROlif. HOBCEN,.. • •
4ftitet,4i.;ll, i .Lehtgh'and ylan ' s CELE
BA NIILY ' '''OAL -
..
Lt . Agents In the Ettsternarket for the
in George,sOreek 0...0.'s celebrated BITU
•;PAL I ,
~ • 1
, , •
Ithlbulelphia, 247 - Walnut Ste 4.
slew York, Room IT ;Trion* Building,
Providence, 27 Cuiloon.Honse Street,
lioston„ 2i Doane b , treet.
0 ' •
. S—ly
'• ' ,
d'ier No. 9,.Port lltiehmo d. .•
R.. w.h.4.ft; •.; , SON,
. 1 I Shippers of l Coal", . . •
. 1 , No. Sl i d WALNUT ST. cPHI AUELPHIA: z
~
: . idopots . for StOraire and Sale' ibid.: /
No. 514 'rest Thirteenth gtiseet, New York.
No. 802 Third Avenue. lie' Yo ,k..(
• Ives' WI-arr . No. 99, India Streetlio ildrd:ere.
Colby's hVitaif, Mt. Waal ugtot Yen*. near
' Federal S - eet, Botiton. , - . J . n.p; '7O-1--•
ir
FRAN' . Llii COAL OP ' *KT.. OrALLzy.
i - -
z,.s . ADE CAUTIONED I at there are
;011h-ries -vrhieli Mine thl. Coal, all of
finder the managementir f t• e undersign
ir
d year Is7o SINNILIEdiN C0.,.0f Pinta
il he the only AtteltS for 11 sale In New
:i.w York New Jersey, and South of Cape
I HALLi 81t05.,d..4:1.1., of Po LB more for Atli,
ts. 'Our Agents / w4deal I no other ima!
i
and parties wlshing,the p r genuine aril
-4
ore it of thent. The oil 'i.rof th is caution
enable thnse Interest to buy under
. f
ts and / their- mud:slant* for .the above
follows: StNNlif 4iSON lieCO., General
'Walnut street, Philadelphia; their New
'ILN at Iktom tn, Trinity Buildings, JOSS. G.
tnit; assisted IiIF.L/Sll.B. 310SELE1',
tonmer street; Boa 'in. '-• • ,
RUTHEILWA. CO., General Agents, ri - Post.,
tie, Baltitnore . , 51(1}; , represented at Hip - -
41, by JOSEPH 41.LSTER4E'rT. Or
.ilven to either of that above panted . es,
le Mae. Wit. B. F'ONV;LE.Ciekend 3 &Anger
thtt Branch K. K. (.70..1.1 a kibort Alt: ONO.
ei Lykenia - alley OW Co pun. 1, '7O-4
• •
Pier N0 1t ,. , 10 Port Richt:
NI CX.S 01
i*.T .
, - '-..-
;ents for the Tale am Shl
-- I
lin Coal '
of, Lyke
_.,
gland,New York. "N,ew .1
of Cape llepry.
, t,
0132 Walnut Strrid, Ph
0 BR Trinity:Bulb big, 7.
et 32 Summer Strayer.-. IL
E i JOSEPH,. ,. M
, d- '- K. - p. 9.80 x t
ER,,itIONALO,SOI
...; , ,..,:v, ~Nn•t u t trip:its 0
1'1•1 7 .'' . ." . 1`I.) *741
0 7 ,!-0 *i.l,
1232
AGENT.
I UAH CI
tufa tkrui
Also'
The
MATED"'
Alsg, So
a
[NOUS
s11111 re—
OEM
PE
DEAL
Oat four
which are i
ed. POr t
w
England,
I I . , , nry, an
111 tier POllll
, tvliatevcr,
ele must p
is *Amply
• standlngl,t
Thil Ac
points; ar
.Ngenta,
York OM'
NY 00 DY;
;A, gen v..
B
- , 411110e avej
:sourg,A"
•-nouldbe - ,
11'11.1 ton° n
the Sun
'o 7 ; and t,lll
SIN
Sole A
"Frank
in Net - E.
I=
1.,,,,. 1,
kfil' AL
EMI
AGENTS for the Ce
MAS LEHIGH '
; •:.:05.Walnut Phil;
19 Trll.lly
19 Doaio. Street.. Ito.. 0
--1%. , r 11 Port 111011 i
EIE
mama
r i) 4
N. ltoltßlS
`HACKER
CAIN
2:o
MOUN
HEATH.
talt 1:17. F'l !'T
LI a UST
1)
No. W
Itoct A=l
Street, i
id Values..., Schuylkill I
.1111 IN Y
hitl Peru AN
Tan. I. '7Ol
rije s rl9,.Port 111,111tromq:
VE,i BOYER•
SHIPPERS OP . ";;;;
te and , Bituinino _
SOLE AGENTs tam. 1 -,
•
AND VEIN BITU„NtsINCIEs ('()m,
'334 Walnut St., Phllaffelitia.
GS Mollie St..ll,istot4;l4
Custom ouse - St., growldrnee.
Anthrac
MEETS
MEM
M .1n•
rho. 1 North Port IpchpOrsl. •
JOHN SCOTT &I. SONS ;
• Miners and Shippers of Coal.
. ,
A : 0 ENTS }OR T 1 L
.11APLE: 11;11111•:, 510_i7NTAI. - NW - fille
"1111'.N VRANICLIN" Dr , rp Rtld Alta
Fr.pa the sslnte v i el us and similar to tll it..-wryis to
the LTKF;NS VALLEY Coal: , •
•
FRAK tilUyt1111:11(
I.IIII.AISELPIIIA—No. 221
°Mee,: r tIOSTON--No. Itioane
r F.«' YORK-111 Rm. Ado
Info ..t•f. nein, .Agents.
Jati 1, . - - -
DAY! HUDDET,L D I
$
• M inersr & Shippers ;
(105!,.1 Witt lint St., Plinstdoll
I I 1 lii.owitray, (Trinity Hu
'•l7 Doane !greet, ilt.".ion.
.17.;atfor the sale of theifollOw.
• Coals:
1.1131.E161 . 3 LEIII6II.
ei . T. CO 11 (. HICK - 011X AND DR.I.PEIL
. 00
0A Ls, and the -
_t
I*.X.c Ei.,(olt, o t i, 0_)„•s- I A MiIK..I:C . COAL.
k iri lsc; • vt[cr Pler NJ. 141%1 fitehroonti.
r 1.3 El izal.et hill, N.. 1.
Pier N0...1ii , -Port Ittrhmott. •
OHN' ROIVIMEL, JR., & BROTHER,
s4ii.t: A'Gr,:r•i! Fore '
'hr FsTorile and .11r111.howi HILL &11411111L'os, White, Ash.
'ihr Superior:HENßY 'CIA T, bath, fre....hanslsx Ptah Ash.
The er.eltrat.4..l DANIEI. WEBSTER. ISeep Reei Ash
BROILD TOP 5E.111,111TE3111506.,
. ; .
ILAVEN'S :WING LEHIGE at Eliznbothport.
2115 1 .4 Wai9iit at.: . plikiliolii:
()fli r ': ' itt l o ‘ . 1 1 . 1 7:3 1 , e T 5 r ` ,7,!17, - ZATLI I 4.. se. 1`..-k:
,;I:Nix.A.I...N.i:F.T--SA . St I:Fai r.llri: l ( l .ar•dated I,y
T.' A. 1111,14W1i and E. P. rPll.ll,l‘l. March 6, 'tit---.1( ‘ )
. - -.- ---4--.- ,
VAN USEN BROTHER &.00.;„
,
Warr% and ShiPperli 's3f .
A. T 4
_.
.'
. ,
011 Compaity'o !Lehigh, Loeint plop tali. Lotted Gap,
. I ;ITllitraharre, Lehigh, an d other..
WHITEI AND RED "ASH COALS.
II .• I-
(Pt, Richrilood,: , .
- iiirriNo Mt itA av)_i,:-', Elizabettiport; -
- il' .k . Jersey JO ty. •
r )1 Walnut: Street, Ptilludeptita.
. ,
, i;•l3:m.s: . 1 111 Broadway, New; York. .
. - 105 Doane St., BraitOti. Ilan 1, 70 . --1; ,,
"J.
II J. DOVE.III . : y k , . - t - r:-"1
'VOX. KENtaticiC.
, . 'NI)RICK
_ .
.
_. DOVEY',& KVA'. __ l .----
f. . . -,
1
XI ers and ildppero or t pre , Coo/, :lard
I
I -
Shaft .. or R ainbow l and •KO One
1 .
. 1 0 A!t S ' •
.'
! ,
_.
1 ~. Whirl No. 21. Port illeitinon i d.
r . 1 .1 I hlhule l phlw,-22Sbock Stteet...
' -. • I ottilVillo—Cintre Street.
.pttlce.c• umtou—No. 17 Doane St. c .las.lL.Regeii.
1 1 / I .temt.'
, ' • A/thins-ton; . —4';;AarAoneS, Arent.
.. k ebrtjayy ID, , eti ~ I 4.11
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'YEAR. 'N0..38.
MEI
CO -
BITE ASTI
smo
MIN COAL,
GM!
IZER,
s of
COAL,
York:
'aphis.
D. PHILA.
1-
SZ CO.,
Luminous
• 1 SIIENAN-
Locust Mona-
, - Valley," .
1.
e •ey and South
11 • elphiss.
i'e • York.
DY. Agent,
N, New York.
& CO.,
OMB
coAL
E 31. COAK
COOK.
N, BLACK
7.171p24
C7oalS,
g• and IV ',-
Ver.- '1
V=
MESE
CO.,
s. Coals.
IMMII
=I
iy.. Ch:unlxrr-
1-ly -
ST, CO.
Coal.
tiding) N. T.
ceiftbrate<l .
Port icymonD. ,
- 1 Pier co. 17. Peel Richmcma.
AUDENRIgD. NORTON & CO.
Miners 'and Shippers
FIRST CLASS .0
OA
LOCUST MOCITIVIDt.
From our two large and celebrated Collieries .
"HAZEL DELL," F. NORTON dt CO.
"C(I3TLVENTAL,” GOODRIDGE AEDEN'BIED.
"Lonnwasr.
Free Burning Red Ash, sand Splendid Priparation.
CC LEETT COLLIERY, Owen, Long it Co.'
MIBBLE
,CREEK Colkett, Prest..
SHADE MEIN.
ENTERPRISE COLLIERY, T. Baumgardner, Press.
Locust Mountain and Lorberry, also via Schuylkill
Canal, to all polnts'accessible by boats.
Om 1 oes : 1 5 1: Walnut" :V. . T. Pl at il e lp .74 a.
27 Doane ßroad
Street,wDoston. . '
J. T. AVDENRIED. • C. F. N
CHAS. D. NORTON. , R. GO .4.
Jan. 1, '7O. . 1— ,
TV Pier Tiro. 11, Pt. Richmond.
SNYDER &,SHOEIWMR,
Shippers and Dealers in
COAL, • --.
SOLE .. 1 16ENT9 FOR 0, Mr;,l3;tili,Eß'sx l voW N
1 1
'PINE FOREST COAL
=3 WALNUT ST.,. I - t3 TRINITY BUILDING:,
PIIILADA. NEW YORK,.
. 10171 S 11NYD,ER. snomix:En.
Jan 1, . . : 14y
_ _
Pier No. 13 Port Richmond.' •
GEORGE S. REPPLIEIt, N. P. GORDON. zi, P. REPPLIER
REPPLIER, GORDON
31INERS AND ISMILPEILS OF
Locust Mountain, Mirnmoth' Vein, Red Ash,
Lorberry, and •
TOWER.:
Offices:
march
CITY, LYgNSVALLEY COALS,
329 Walnut Street, ,Phlladelphla:
111 Broadway, (Room No. PO Netv lork.
27 Doane Street, (Room'No. 3),!Boutii.
Pler 14, Mouth.
BORDA, KELLER & .NUTTING , '
-
Minero and Shippers - of Coak•
WEST'LEHIGH GREENWOOD,
TAMAIA SHAFT,
•
MEV .sDALE, •
ERT * LORBERRY
NORTH FRANKLIN RED ASH,
BLACK HEATH, • •
_ BIG RUN LOCUST MT.:I
_
. • . 4:31ARRE71.40
' fur
1 Kllhy 0,0414,1:! r;LE.
.13 2 7 Roo mra 6 ti3 1. 1. "
Street,
ralEl
GORDA. HELLER &
FRANKLIN WHITE AFIIL
A.Ol 24; 'at.
• •
•
'tn) god.
_• II EISSEN B El.. JOHN D. II EI.fISKEitUTTE;..
WM.' HEISSENBUTTP4A7CO. 9:
Shippers and Wholesale'lalees le
Schuylkill, Lehigh- and .dunTberland
. -C 0
TRINITY BUILDING; 111 BROADWAY, Room - SI,
P 4,0. Box: 5019; NEW YORK. .; .
,
Sole AeVats for Ni W York and Vicinity for the
'Sate-of LEE, GRANT & CO.'S PLANK RlfiGE, and
ILAASS: , PRENIZER'S TURKEI: 11,171+: COALS:
march 33,'70 • • ' 11-1 y •
DAVIDSON; "ZOUNG Si" CO:
WHOLESALE , PEA LEES LE
tOOUET MOUNTAIN, I.:IL& MOKINA , Ici IT
M
'CUBERLAND. SCRANTONdi
•
:
• ..
ROOM No . ". 16; TRINITY BUILDING, NEW , YORK.
WM. M. DAVI DsON, fornierly of Tyler & Co. '
iiANUL 11.'YOU NG`, formerly of Cald w el I, Gordon & Co
ROBERT. K. BUCKMAN: .
Jan 15. '7O ' I.IY : --
-
..
yr.. JOHIIBON & HOBOICEI!1'.
..
•
• COAL. • ,
VAN - 71Cler xl . & STOUT,
.b... m F D ISITIPYLKS OF TUE ! •
Celebrated i "FUltoll" 4C"Stout" (Lehigh) Coils,
From the Ebervale and the StoutCollierievi, near
Hazleton, a. Delivered direct from mines on
begird V la at Pr. Joi.msorl. HOBOKEN. and NZW
BRUNSWICK:. N. J.
• (1114 it 46 Trinity Building;
Offices: 111 Broadway, New York. •
((retnrwary at 119 Broadway.)
It, '6 , 41
•
CALDWELL, CONANT & WEKTON,
,NO. 111 BROADWAY; NEW YORK.,
tiLonnis 33 and 36 Trinity ituilfll4.l •
Nt'llol.EHA LE. DEAL7:RSCIN
117II,KESBIARRE, •
PITTSTON, RED ASH,! '
M A ILAN OY, Slit A NToN.
' LOCUST MOUNT.% IN
CUMBERLAND, BROAD TOP, ETC.,.
•
CI
• 0 ATS ,i i
____,.
.•, , 1
COLE AGENTS for SPAS' fork and the North ni
..J theca +4,e,!iated II 017NCIL RIDOE FRF.I.:` BURN
INO . LEItIOII. COAL. TILE l'itlmitosE, TIIF:
POW:ELTON Sentl-bßuntinoun and other drat-rate
Collieries. ! 1: .
JAMESW. CALDWELL. .C. R. CONANT,
•
l, ' WALTER WESTON.
April 3, '4r. .i. : . !—I I
^ ' •
, . 3
OFFICE‘ OP THE NIAGARA -ELEVAT•;•
. ING CO., $ COMMERCIAL BOCK, RUFFAIA), N. Y.
".. .
COAL. CO
COAL. •
AL.•
TUE NIAGARA ELEVATING CG., lawing fl
large surpitta of Lot and Dockage, will he preparki
at the opening of navigation to receive from the Erie
Railway, Canal, or Lake, any q uantity of (VA I. fur
storage or EranNhipment to any-plooP East hy Canal
or west by.the Lskei, upon as favorable term.. as any
parties .in ButTalo. 'llleir., lot is well lomitVl fur a
,generalcitY husiness. :' ,
. Clitri CLARKE, Viee-Preiblent._
March 27,
'69 .. , 13=41 .
-
alining
':
• ' Murbilitrn, &c.
._.:
•
MOTlCB.—ldontihw-turers 'aryl 'users . of Sttlath
Pump , . are herrliy cautioned avalnat the nutri
facture, sale, or tice It( any Pampa that ar6 an- In
fringenit•nt on Allistm's Patent, (fated September 21,
Iw6, as they) will Ix! pronectited to the full ezttlit: of
the law.
illlVe alretulYetln mcneed t agaltiat set Tralpa r
iles, arid wlJl proeteente all other Infringers.,
• Port Car bon, April rl,'lstis. • ItOIST. ALLISON.
Part le, In Want of l'untiot can he supplied at reit/tont
blemileea by the undentlgned:7
• ALLISON S. FIANNA'S,.
k‘rankliti. run Works,l'urt Carbpn, Pa.
• Jan. •I-
•
- I
tINEW SELF -O ILING CAB. WHEEL (or
, M I N Esj sc., made at the
JAL.tPI'A•rN
FOI MY.
. •
By' BO "Bili sole Manufacturierm.
Also, all hind!: of rwttingg. Building nardwaie,
LeWit4 order' with 11. K. WESTON.
- N 0 , 43 I".a:t Niieweuian St., Pottsville
May '7O 22-3 n)
R°PT's SECTIONAL - WROUISHT IRON
• '.SAFETY BOILERS.
Roars IMPROVED. TRUNK • ENGINES,
'Ratioßari. Porttile and Radar..
DoubliiPistan Square Hoisting Engines, Heist
ing Machinery for Coal Shafts, Sloping,
. Grist Mills,-Stores;&c., acc. ' •
One of gime Holsters cau lie aeon running daily at
HILL & HARRIS' Colliery, Mabanoy City. Pa.
PARTICULAR ATTENTION IS INYITED TO
the lloTster, Which has no equal. No (less . ' points
—havind tiro pistons In one
when .the other is
passing centre. It regol rem no friction st raps, clutches
or brakes of any kind.- Started, reversed. or stopped
instantly, and at any point of revolution, by the
simple movement of a single lever. Having no keys,
gibs, set screws, onother adjustable pacts, which in
other holstein require the knowledge and constant
care of au . experieurest engineer, can be , put in. the
lands of the most Inexperienced persons. All Its
wdektng parte are enclosed In the case or - cylinder,.
and are thrum protected from 'breakage,-Itte cifeete - of
dust, dirt, and rust or weather.. Its extreme light
ness, compactness and rapid speed, highly commend
it for this use.. Orders retelved for the manufacturer
by the undersigned, who will'also furnish descriptive
catalogues, price lists, drawl ngs, estimates,,and other
Infortuation,
NATHANIEL GARRET, Mattanoy
A. H..CHURCH, purfille, Pa.
ifnr '
- -
C.
H. aILIIELISON,'
No. 1= MARKET STREET. pitiLADEi.I O IIIA;
• GIGICIMAL AGENT. .;
1
,
vtosigc 4 e,gb t ,i,,i no*
Vit
Al5 l / 4 14- AfllF°4o ''''
_
- The 14CALitlet Made under theate patents differ
from all others, completely doingsway with all long
levers, check rods, and friction on the knife edges,
therAtty insdrlng an accurate, sensitive and durable
scale. N. 11.—fiend for illustrated catalogue. Also,
Agent for Weston** Patent Defferential Pally Block.
August 13.1•70—514 M •
--,..-----,--
ALL KINDBisf Garden Toots can baba& at re-s:
'ducal pilots, at SOLOMON, HOOVER'S Tie,
13_t ova and House • Parnislilog Depot, No. VS Ciente
"
atreet, Pottsville, Pa. 1
Apra ii, 'lO 1 , , l(141 ,
.Ic. • I ! ,
Pljila
elpl ia,
I - .
tli ;
I [
Meer',
C
i,lekigli a
IP
IYOMING COALS.
t street. lAcrand 8.09ry,
i L
-pea Wizlnm
IDET,P
31111(E tr . .l M. S. K
PHILA I
, u tti
110, 47
EMI=
MAS
SHIPPEU
Schnyl
CO
I i
inbision SiHefted and, to en
i
I . .
•nt At, Ph Iptila. -
S—l:
.. •
ALF.INP,.:
''
1111.1'EliS 0 Ir' TII E
11,A."; LOCLTST MOKNT.I I '.'.:
bents on Co
le Terms. -
41 INA
ME
MI
E 149 A !F•D
TEL CANIB
C 0
Strctt 11 . 11Ibidelphia.
• fl3-Iv.
' 10$ Walnut
0
FM
IA:. JTJNE J 7 TH. 1870. r—A Or);Pn'rl nei--
: been thir4,lny formed between the uo
for the purpe.i.e of 111,311"41 and Sit tretT.o:
NS - VALLEY (XI AL
-the '!l..Aftl" I:RANK LI. C4A.l.ll.:lta','!
timid C Toiy, undert to firm name of
ITII 11 10i *. co., I
21:0, t'' . 4Nl - T St., I' lihola., alul Of
I 311()- Z., l REESE 4. - -U9 r. , Sballudi i I)
Tuos; C: Rt , :i.r,oc,
.Iw. A. Siiir4.
II ENIIY Iiill"(;11N :It,
It. D.l-(.11NI:11i
I
flemig;
SM I'
G. s
T. F
J. II
SVITII
EM '4,1111
Rorberni.frttli
• r
RANKLIN LORBERRY !VEIN COM,.
I ST FRANKLIN LORtEtIRY COAL .
Ft s"l.leX‘lust vets by Messsi-s. REprLIER,
co., wly) an my ',rile .Aitent.s. Parties
root tlivtli !nay al wal.a. d petal upon get'.
Ni.. v.* Walnut St. I'll limy phla.
Ib Nt-sr York.
I(No. :Nt Doane ~tr. et, Ybyatal 3. Bostor..
EAS I
Nig
IMMI
11Millington, 941.
OF
es
THE NtOCANAQIIE COAL
ANY. No. :01.1 Front St.,
I I..MINitroN,
WP 3I
prepare,' U. I in. Tr:l4 I.‘
Inul Il•u.'V t 1 1 ottr
~e
;„ .
u i
~:ti4~
rated Gloat, the " tdoennuque,
.If'lll
and .41
inter...ll4lo:ol ifrol It 1 , , their a4l.‘alittige
i ll y to i:"Irs1:11 till eoinviany I , ernre making
1y 4-4,:itr“,l!: or engaging earg.k.s,
.nlnt f•.r t 11".est,-rit inarl:Hrt; Erie. .
Irav re dr Grace,
•"" E4l,ll.rii do Wilmington.
1.,.. the tiov,•l 11.11 f Iromd
C.al CO. ' S C . 9;liA • for thr.ntannfActtnr of 1
ndlcx 17.; e. :eh! ; coke firNt finality and
' Nlitty
N. io
LA., 1.
PC ret
I •
-
_ r
1 E ti.. C (_) N N It";
I.lllner and Sidi-per of the t:el4)rut4)!l . v
UST IVIDUNT - AIN COAL'
175V.11.14;,.,54C111 , 11.K11,T, r(l., rA.•
BM
Lo
~!
:',Tor snte
.nob go Vet
.. :
T 1 -
1 BENT.---tiTitltt: It.ooll 1t . 16 t.l4.yelling al
lieil....in I lioitrii.on - . lI4LY - -- )" • " rect.
leo tn.-. P0..., , ;(5i0n gl For
T. 1 1!,. - t :1 it
( BALE.- - 1 palr Preal
•.1t,,&e.: & Et. liftistin
i.i It ur $1.11.1.111i, shure
Izi 0.1 plate,' and a P
Aply
s hic,heap, pa_
JOHN IL iIIIEIIAI'S Cttpl Yard,
t
It. 1:,0--T.t—t I l Coil SC, Pottsville..
- 1
1 4 1.43ASE.—Tlie valuable tract or Coal Land
ultt it. Robb it. Winebrener Tract, late VIII-I
ted hi Blythe and tivituylk II Township s,: Silt kitting about 3;klai.cri-s, Is offered for leage
4/mOSi - table t crow. "Apply to I
II I ' • -F. It. 1 11.VSNAN,LAgent, ~: 'I:
i
", Mt. %...ff , Pottsville or. Port Cartion: , ' I
" SLATE !! SLATE!!!I - --:-
p 0
1 lac
ailio% e
turtn,
Jul)
F° ~
pla
kin : i
crs h( 1I
il. 111 1
-Nov
ri'o.ll
i kn
font, 'TI
and có
upon n
Feb
SLA
ME ,
ll'
;In
IA
I'o
, 1
ii
,14
~ ‘lii
_ Niayl'!'"l 70 •
, . .
•
lEti
R.BLE PRO'PERTY' FOR BALE. -
I.
~•'Th., l plemild resident..., lately occupied by
TllctSl.ll.- it.l.Ntli - 01.7, In .Ishlatml, Pa., Dwelling.
Offlee, (troll, and Ice diouses. !stable. Hot Beds, &v.., '
&v. Tlie it 'S, idling iS emnparat lye-1y new, and has all
the lit'Stern conOnhetices. Price low and terms
tie: • •1 1 1 , 19.!." to - , I ' HENRI' C. lirszslil.,
Heal Est to Agent, is Ntahantongo tit.
i
may s, 'l , i l-2.•.:—tf • -
~ ... „ _
.1 1 Pd
pE LAND:FOR BALE.. .- r
'' iJs.l lures heavy prop I illthcr.
. .."11) 1.. eta...twit , . ti ints,r—ise.tsi and rails.
:Fn„" sill !hob! r. •
guli ;" superior Stilit, :1!•11 timber—ear stud.
mkt :" pine timber, de.'
. - Don,:'• red shale, land..uitaide foktrue . k fant:4,
bet sve.:4l T isimilaa MO Muhan , e, - t 'it y. . eeeral small
house+ n, lots In Eislitne Ti'
l, and Mill tirek. ,`l'i'mp
Lot , ii,..1al ippa, I.; i i i.ilthlt and shell:111,1.1,h: • ! •
,' • i l'. W. siltiA VER, .Verlit for•f M'll'i.r, :
3ii
• ly , '7l-27.:nit . 1'2.5. Cent re Kt., Pott,sv . 1
Ili!.
' , -• •
j.;011.13A
E:AF um.r zni r ,l i I: t l r rn V :7
.t melits.i nl stot*sttati:,li , i7oo;tlitul-
,kill antl Sulqiuehatinti Italtroad, II tailNi' from l'Otiti:
ville. li lt nitres of the :tauti are under cultivation.-7.
acres ark, t covered with .cliestnut sprouts of IA years
growth wl .
ich would make excellent prop timber.
Xiacreshre tweets, with heao.- timber. The Improve
ittenni etnedst of a: substantial imuge, a new SW iSa
Barn, ow houses, and a new iiawiniii iv lib water pmi.
pr. stock tfoisistit +dimmest. coven, stain, hay, and
If rming intplements.l The price tudttst•can be real
zsed from the timher.g.lone. terms easy:. .1.ppl1: to
soils t1.5111.7..1F7;P., Esterly's Building, Pottsville,
or to FE.IttIUS U. PAlNtill.‘ it No. ISO Cent re street,'
Pottsvi le. l• • ,' ', . August. 7, '6.1--4r2-tf
- F OR SAILE-1111j: FULL!) Sy i NI, - :
One. I. VelTtne Lotniint l i l v i:'ll'eki A
e:sultnble i ro t r 3 4- i f i :) ER
t gouge l
road. lab' been used • for conveying coal anti coal
i
dirt at 414' fill-nen, and IN In good order.
Also—.ll‘so Horizontal. Pumping Engines, IS-Incli
t.
cylinder i (II eitnike,,with geartng and tx,bs. aid ;
two 1111 I.rot pumps pin!yards each, with 11-Inch plun
gers. h'
o et:. stroke, anti two Jinn of pumps Sd yams
each, one l inch, the 4.41 het ' 11-incli ; plunger, eaeli:7
feet striOtei • ~
Also—goo. it-."--- --
•feil
~trot
Ah
The
tic of,
u,fia prloo4
(.1111111.
•
ersigniti has always on, hand a large
( -1 1.1.Nft SLATE, ur all '• 'and of
salty, wiliqlk he will sell at th'e cheapest
e slate ra)i be delivered by Railroad or
ly to WM.. KM:BACH, Agent.
Flarqbarg, Berlcs Co., Ta.
f 111
for fo
Al
boil,
_.....Wp4.
horse 'engine; LYI In. bore. a ft. stroke, 19 ti.
shaft, II ;In. diani„; Pump shaft . IS Ili.
I. long : runup wheel 11 It. Warn. la in. op
In. pitch-, With bobs and eonneeting rods , .4ed to run , a 20 In. pump. : -
inte enkinp, IS in. Fiore. ti ft, st roke, 19 ri.
with punt wheel, shafts and all gunnel.
urn 19 ft. t. bun., with a wrought iron shaft;
horse erklne. IS inch bore. I lett
th a heavk fly wheel; also With Pump
tilam., 12 tibou the face, 4 In. pitch:; tirUn I
, tt4 rot' ght ron shaft; 4 boilent 34, - .ln. Mans.
•
~ 'Rh all . •nnections and,with all pump-,
3 ans. •
a ble breaker with :In horse engine.
orse engine with drum bud all minuet!.
yilong, dirt plane; 1 set of heavy cone gear
dshig tricks and'w ire rope. .
dgift ears, ila in._gange. 5 large coal mitii,
ire the P. d• R. R. 11. Several lame dump
I tn
': 1 feet wtre rope, ditrerembsizes:' -A Lure
e .. Ith tools, anvils, vises; betimes, de...A
of eeond- .haild belting, various size... ,4
old hand flook'apikt.w. kV tons of:second-
I from 22 110..t0 t 2 lb. per yard. 7 second
saftis. 2IS yd.: If in. column pipe • ISO yd 4.
i n • pipe: 1_29 ln— ntPote pu p ; 2 Id In. pole
1 0
1 lo ontotise; 4 driveribsuitable for shirting
at iron ore - hank. Also, the wood w_nrk of
a rrourbling sit RN; blacksmith and cat-.
rt 4.MO'blowingtib .stldtadile for lame
. . _
,
~.. ltsiike enable:
engine.'(
•
I !dab
fly wb
the.fite
hit%
1 sixt y
fly wh.,
lions; 1
1 MI
ntr te,'
wheel.
10 ft. di •
x 3, ft..
lug coil
11. 1
FIIII.
1 41 .1
3' I
I twen
tiotim ter,
wl
Si hemp
same in.
truelto,
lot ot
large lot
tons
• Itrutd '
hand it:
'X e •I;
pumps
ram ot
2 hreake
penter
fain .
160.h0
1 litt)
2 thin
1 twen
four
1 ten
1301 e
. ble en.
in. x 22 ft
n.x.Wit
U. Y. MIL
.
. „lo rt. 30 ft.
• 20 n. x 14ft,.
• 21 n. x 1.2 ft.
21 n. : ' O.M ,
• ho a
,tubtr.
't du 11011 et%
n. . utattplpe
1 In. ..1.311 ,, ,
to and tip • .
b, FL minttut Irie
1.
4, 1 ... • ••
.1.,,.
110,3.:1. -,.. ~
.le putu. - el
" - i ." • '
.. ... ~4
1 upr
130 •
.11311 y(10 1
with I
40y4
111
SIJ" "
EMI
13) tp
1 16---
4 11 -1'
112 "
1 S"
1141 n.
10 sm
At
Nov. a
•• un pins ro'o
lift and. Some
Pa. •
I •
POTTSVIAt, SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER' 17, -1870.
Keimmerein i
. ,
d. other First Class
. PAftRISH,„
iD DEiLEU
ill and IBituminbus
.
BEI
MMMI
Mil
_s ft.
(lit.t.
tt ry
ME
EMI
11)..fons - 0 chain. varicins'
stzes.
I'lo feet hoistlng drum, .
with bolts and bat,
Kings complete. 'A
1 6 fret V.Wsllng drunti
- 1 6 "
13
I stack sft dlax3o#lceigi
1 stack 31 ItLilo _ • l•
3611i=10 " " ;
" Ms 3o "
10 tons splice_ platei, 10 ft:
long, 41nx.N.
Lot of ;mint, stubs. . •
I newl2ftexhaustlna fah'
300 ft new , 1 4k second-Mohr
7 ‘ Wire rope.
Sigft2.lMgaaplPe. •
" 1 "
Lot of 4 In; hautboy Pipe.
Pump shafts.. wheels and,
_ blocks cif various sleek
Znew hal I ism, 31 tn.ellant.
wlthilva fronts and
connections.
1 small fcsit' lathe.
• Also. always on tlan v i
ln. and OD In. tins for n
tllatlng at Mines, •aft
small limp
ea Coal Strom. .
JABFZ SPANKELI
by Barman *. Itsirdsey is
Pr 4 boobs *flub, firoieries..
POR TEL
_ • PRESENT SEASON,:.• "
- „ • •
1 , "We flee' sysigned and matitdirtured alargd:
• riock of the
p3N - mErr
RUDY-MIK CLOTHING
Which we war:lint to be
AS FINE- 13 CUSTOM WORK
-!n all resyled,;!.
I
-)
i
,4 \ Our preparations for
, the present session
.\ , have been-On the lar
kgest and most libe- - ral !wale, and our
present stock is- -
Gents' I ae superior .to
n 1 1 any
one f a o s r m
ourer
GOODS. former ones
-Finest in 400
have been
quality, \ \s uperior:'
the; greatest to those
variety, and tip, --
; 1 00 cf other
tOlbe very lateit houses.
fashion and style.
,Embracing everi r.
gentlemen's toi et and , • '
- thing essential , ' to a
al
_' ..
• ,
wardrobe. I I' . - V I ! '
CUSTOM DEPT. ' l:'
1 ,
Goods of our own impor- ' ' ~
' •
tation:—the newest and
beat fabrics of' - English.' . 1 .. . ,
Preach, German , and ../
Homo Iclannfacture., , / '
The most sh'illfUti '/ TiOTS,
6 uttersin.Plillatiel- • ' ' n . i 4L,, 1
_ Pilit6 1 2 . Btrie" 0.13:1 14, ./ luuills-
good - workman- . ' /
_ship. .A per. ' ' / - Children't,
feet 111 guar- •
a nte: with
//
::ParmENTr 3 at La- r
toa
tn. all .
other re.
~' Many new styles
apectp. ,
,
made up in the
/
- most 'elegant man
nor, and securing the :
,410
, - }inalities 'of durability
and strength, so desire
.4o the in Claildrens' Cloth.;
jog. Wo have made i .
i i •
t oil ; sip . ecial l efforts in
~.,
this department,
..c'
n ' ask special
.810 . 74. ' '‘ an a d tteneion to our
, stock. Twen- '
Awn
- n '' • . ti l i; ~ ty-five styles'
82 u , It ts„ . of little
'. OVED-
t1)0. •
COATS ',
b ii . \• '
PIDTMS'I" \
. 1 ,
wit
'
. .
~ . ;
By our system J , Ol Seff-Moisuremen;_ ~
easily understood, we enable customers
to send their ordein such a way as to
SECURE AEI I OD PIT-as though -
facl l s
they-came ihemselVes to our.Establish.'
moot. • ,
Our Improved Rules for Self-Measure
ment, Samples and Prices sent when re
quested. And
. PROMPT ATTENTION
given to all 'orders. with OIIAEANTEE
of entire satisfaction.
Chestnut a
PHILADELPH
081
JOHN SPOAMAKER,
818 and 820 Chestnut Street,
PHILADELPHIA..
Okobei 16.
AGGIE BOLAND. 122 CENTBE
BELOW AM ERICA.`( hours, Pornvz
Hat now opened a new Stock of Spring & Summer
Gouda suitable for the present aeaeon, ;web as
BLACK SILK. MUMMER cr.orii t - CORSET?:
FRINGES, TRIMMINGS, NOTItiN, &e.
Mae on hand a new 14
SPRING AND SM.MEIt.:SACQUEs„
which will be sold cheap r formsh.
Ladles Cloak made to order. New patterns Just
reeeiVed. Orr. RO.
?PTO ADVANCE ; OP!
.1 1 1 •
BLACK ! S!LKS.
No wily:oer On French Milk niplimt yet.
No advance on Black tio,als. i
No nth ;knee on Mourning goods. •
No advance on•otoL French Goods. . <
No advance on our German Goods: •
We are advlstA they ! : will' be much , ?licher.
. . TABLE BAMASKS, _ r '
.•
With 116311cl'an , Napkimito trmicrj.
_ 'Rich liaraMili Table (noth. , .
Sq,crleeabltiLrmol fablo Linen , . .
- ~ , Towelllng of 'Every Kind. . . ' .1
'Thwels by The Slogic or quantity. r. , d
Re.st *hill Frrnits mpriFle. .. •
Hest- Linens try tii Yard or Neel.
.:.- • : WIDE tiIIEETINGS, .
•
-
At rt ilel ' . .kNkf”..—All the Widths.
Hest shirting , . at: Wholesale Prices. ,
!!
NeW•Flannelpt-i4 Every - Kind: • ::'-• `,„
New (*Mon i.lainels. wane Extra gentles: ~I,
Orwra Flannels - In MI the new good .Color s. '
Royal ittiality.Tlekinqs Down to Low gotsl.-. , I
• ~.- I -- . .
N:11.--A irrnr Sri - irk—ALL Fit F.F.H4-Pr.zurs Tit P:
. ' linirE4, , T—W,E C.,4241 SUIT I'M:. • : -
COOPER' NA 6,, Yi
S. I enRNEIL:k;DriI r AND f TR' Ern;
PHILADELPATA
'
SPRING a RUMMER 'DRY GOODS
• FOX'S,. ,BROTHER;
. .
le
270 L'INTAE !STREET, POTTSVILLE,
•
Desire to call Mien lou to their extensive assort
ment of •
^
SPRING AND SUMMER
DRY GOODSI
tat Styles of the
etlnsisting of the
•
Foi-eign &
MI
omestic I\l.4rlcet,s
niai nut COLLEcrswers,
INCLUDIve
Akto
BLACK A-ND COLQ •
LACES AND.E•
IMOIDERI S.
t.INENS.
OOODO and DOSItISTRIB,
lOSI I ERY. -
' OII3FEB OF ALL HIS e
I=M69
SHAwia
. We also call si4
GROCER
Which is wiry tai
- .ears for this marks
my to enutneraL .e nave, but ererit.htng in
nna-r4ssig Dry Gooddirot GA L
:very ettore,oin tx. had
'at, our establishment._ ;1
April rt. ' l9 •li I i , ' . 111-4!'
WJ: EVER
. LAU 811011 LO ' I
PORTER. No.Strave
fort awl benefit
'below ARCH. ICIVeI
Mantle Stockier', Clot
July 311.'70
CLOAES, &e., &c
' •
ALL KINDS.
8 * 'O I
rSWARE
with thW awing
ot,-;eonittder nee,-
TiEW PATMITLACAPI26.
BRACE and CU T 81.1 -
• - the anus.' Perko, maw
a North Eloreaatit 111..
~ Eo Tenses.
t ilopportarus
Lidr Sttendili.
Dittricilt;taof
aeries
OSee of the
is,:roz, wool)
ME
. F
. . . • •
1 it be true I eannot tell ,
That spirits in the thret dwell,
But w - alkthit In the wood ea-day, .
.1. vision [ell aerials 'my way; ' ' .
Not Sflell as' onen,benenth the green
tPerhangiug boughs, I should have seen,
Rnt Id tile tranquil noon-tide hour, , !
.tnil In the erituson Champion flower, -
And Itt the gram I felt s power;
And every leaf of hyrb Sad tree . -
Seemed.like syviideelthat greeted mc, • ,
haying, "Not to ourselves nine°
We live-and die making no moan.'
The sunshine arid the Sumner sho wer. ••
And the pull dens of night are ours;
We no more,thain what is given: . ,
ourpraiseand pirayer ts leaf and 1)1001:II,
And day - quid niateotir sweet perfume
[.lke incense r 1 es up•to hettiven; - ... •
Thus our street lives we lice alone.
We come and go:and make no moan.';
140 out Of the wets' I went, . •
Thinking. I too *lithe content
. ,
WO h slay and nig ht,' with good and 111, . ...
Submiksive to the heavenly wilt.
The power whirls gives to plant and tree
Its 'mind and Ilimit; gave to me • - ..
Jost SO IIIII:ICIi love and so much like: ..
And whatimever pence:or strife,
or sin, or sorr ow, may be mine,
Is bounded a lawallvine. •
I nanntit do the things I would : • - •
I cannot take the bonndlens good
Whichlove might bring or heart desire;
And though toltenvpn my thoughts aspire,
'Tis only given me to behold, •
,;
Far oft Its spheres or living gold. . .
The little orb, on which I ride
Around the non in circuit wide,
Is all , :n unknown, hind to rue • ..
.tod waters rd 'an unknown Kea"
The narrow ilourne 14'herelri I move,
This ,la ic
e
tie r
h tstl o t d i urnal Unia round.`
t° and
lQnrde ,
-.'
By strimgest, late myj feet are bound,
II as light apyin It trout:Liar, ' .
as when a iltinceon's Irma bar ' ....
't 'rosses the splendor, of titstar!
tiiii, world oi l memory and care. •
This cave of
.ttiouglits. this Cell ,, f.l.ta ''t•
Ttii'iltuln . "' °CLIP. in-which I dwell, . .
Is cost as heaven and deep n'S 1,011,
And what- it is I cannot tell. .. .
In' this one ply ;mind is sure— .
That in my place I Must endure
To work and wait, and, like the dower ,
Tnnt takes the sunshine and the shower,
TO bide. in p-tne the passing hour;'
To kliow tile world Ilk sweet and fair,
'though life be reeted fard'in care;
To watch the lar.off light of heaven,
Vet ask ho more than what Is given, •
Cousent•to Niko,: what nature la ng , -
I B all inexplicable t kings',
'Content to k now:. wintt• 1. have known, -
t "'I it `:-." and the and ina'ke no moan. •
1
. -. .
I
: c TOHN 131 1 0 Ny."';' , : ROUSE ANI.KiItAY4.
.t} !--- 'lle ;hun k
though equal to the ordinary farm-hbuses of
the' region. It staihk %, roll up the kills, sepa
rated from the wildeinciis by a fe* cleareil
fields, commandinit :1 Majestic: viOw of the
mountain World. : ;,A. l'eiv rode .hi front, a
huge howi4ler. surrounded by a plain board
fenee; is the fit monument of the fierce' old
apostle of liberty. -. At its 'foot is the grave.
The [ headstone • was hi - Might from an old
graveyard in New: England, where it stood
over dd.! gi . ave? of, his father, Capt. .lohn
Brown, who died . in New York in 1776:
• The
Whole sOniels covered With family inserip
- .
Bons:, :..i
whit Brown, eit,eetited at Ohar.les
town, Va..,iDee.....!, is.iii; Oliver and Watson;
his sons',..both killed at •Thirper's Ferry the
same year;
.• anti his ,sOn• Frederick, Inm
ct
defe in K ansas lee liorder-rullians - in Is‘iii.
Above the little glass 'enclosure towers the
.nighty t'oek; :WIMP( iis ihigh as the liougi li
and tin its summit is eat' in massive granite
diameters the inseriptiOn : ".Tulin Brown,
I s- - o.r stzoiaing on the i r top iii this mond
nterital met:, for t lie fi.r-1 time, I tell 'that '.I
comprehended the, eliatacter -Of the man
whtsAt name it coniniernorates. I could well
uuderStand how siieli a Man, forined in Ole
mould of the old !Scotch Covenanters and
English• Puritans, brooding over .the,l4Urror's
ofs,avery, ftireseeing tlfeimpendin„... struggle
for litter y, maddened liNt the murder of his
son and muds in liaSini
n, with the mighty
norther' hills looking diiwn upon him, the
i .
i uili of 'Omitting' river?. iind the songs of re:
sZiOnding tempests, and the -mystery of the
illimitable Wilderness ally alutut abouthim. stould•
-easily collie' to think himself inspired to .tle,
wend like a Mountain-torrent, and sweep the:
lilac': curse front out. thellaini. I reverently:
raised iiisPlett, and sung, "John ;Brown's'
body lies a-mouldering in , the grave; his
soul his inareltingon,"' 1• • ! •
I• . .
MY brought out two men, Who .
secniefLte.nitOri lig UM uninhabited place.;
They toidnue in their huckbiaird • and we,
jolted down to the Valley. They told me the
estate nearly all sold; and the family re 7 i
moved totalifornia!: that the man who'oWns
till; house would sell it, with a hundred and'
sixty-acres of land, for fifteen hundred dol
lars, wishing to, Move to Raitsii.s.- Gerritt
smith's egrocs haye all left town . ; a nd.he is.
still: possessor of miles of ! this' wilderness.:
Last autumn the .hinnestead way purehasedl
by'an asSociat ion of-gentlemen itt 'lei eh- York,
and willjdOubtls be preservederhaps to:
lasSmie a famous Wave of pilgrimage for our!,
children;My blacksin Ith friend, with whom !
I rode, Said : " - },:Yerybixly !in !North Elbal
Wanted to sell andlgo away. For !his part,!!'
he didn't see why.people ginnel up there to',
climb thinn thunderin' mountains." There
are probabl y t . less than four !Mildred people!
now -living ni* this Marge township of eighty I
thtiusand aeres.—[Prom "Adirsinda(kii in
Auguxi, th,
of .6 ow
and .P•1r . •..") - • ; ' • •
' •
Vi: Et ti AN IC AI.:, TpYs.—Those who
.IXL link carefully studied the history of
meehanies must have been struck' with thej
great difference 'which exists between thki
objects upon which our most ingenious me-'
chunks expend the efforts, and those-sub
jects that! abi)rtfeit lie;.inventive talent of
few' liiindreil years go.; i In, the present day?
men devote themselves to tire working out',
of practieal pro* us, that is of, inventions
that tend to- inere se the. general ceinfort of
- .mankind. In the early "days'of mechanical i
invention, the flying pigeon of AarcytaS oft
Tarent um would hive attracted more Eaten-
Akin dhan a cotton! gin, while ' to-day,, the i
unlimited faith-that we have in the Meehan-;
teal ability •of obri artisans, robs such me-1
chanieni 'eurilsitiefi of half their interest,.!
Some of the results of.t he inventive titbits
of these old. meehanichms, -were certainly
very wonderful, acid, if now in :existence,
would form line Subjects for. study. Tints
llegionunitanus made a dying eagle-and an
iron fly, which, after Making the tour, of the
room, . returned to its master. Albertus.
Magnus r i hi the thirteenth • century,:; spent
thirty years in co wre
tructing a human figure,
Whie advanced to the door •When any one
katieked, opened It. and saluted the visitor,-
I'n -the Wafer - dock; presented to Charle
-magne, by. Haronnal-Raschiti, twelve doors
in. the did opened; respectively at the hour
which each, represented; they continua('
'open till noon, when twelve knights issued
Out on - horsetutek; paraded round the dial,
and then retut r uirtg,shnt themselves in again.
CanittS, who so ably InVesturated many sub
jects' itt ,theoretieal. mechanics , constructed
an ingenious toy for
.Louis
: the fourteenth,
con fisting of a carriage dniwn by two hon.es,
'containing a little , figure of a lady, with. a
„coachman 'and 4ttendatit,il. The coachman
stria:eked his' whip; the -hores . moved their
less naturally, and When.the carriage arrive'd
(*mite to the - Ring's seat; it stopped ; the
'page Stepped doWn and opened the door, and
the lady alightedland presented a petition to
Louis, 'Hundreds of -sueh InVentions are
recorded in the o!d works on mechanics, but'
'we do - not remember, to have met with a sin
-gle one that had , been produced within the
last-hair century,.., nturY, : - The cause •Of this is not
that our inventors are - eficient in mechani
eat-ability, but that,,id general they 'apply'
,theig,tal nts , in a, more useful direetion.—,
TothniiriL ilif. - 1' .': ' P
•
'TIiE r TAVO boys were
apprentteedin a earpunter'siehop. One de
termined ,to make himself useful, a thorough
Worknisn ; the either, "didn't care." -. One
read and stadielf, and got books that would
help t him to Miderstan the principles of.his
trade:. 1 'He 'spent. the evenings at home,
reading. !The other liked Ain the test.• He
often wont with other boys to have a "good
time.; ,• - •
4 1!;.'ei e," he often said: to his shopmate,
"leave your books; go with us. '. What's the
useof all this reading?" r - - •
"If Waste these golden momenta," .was
the lboy'e4 answer, "f shall line what .1 can
neve:Make up."
.
While the boys were still apprentlees;an
offer of two thousand dollars appeared in the
newspapers Afor the best plan for a State; ,
;Ho, se; to' tie- built in one of the Eastern
States. sThe studious boy saw the advertise-'
pent. and determined 'to try toe it. After ,
earefull.studY a ., he drew out his 'Plans and
sent theni to lie committee. We suppose
he did I nbt 'lenity !:expect to gain the prize,
but still he thoughti "there is nothing like.
trying." in Shout a week afterwards a gerw
tiernsin arrived at the carpenter's shop, and
ask li if an architect by the name of Wash-
ing nWilberforee livid there: e' _
"No,' said the, iteet• "Wit I've got an
appren lee-by name.' ; ' :
-,4 tetts , :isee -tam,' , said the gentleman. •
The list(' was oned, and itifonwid,l
that 4 plan - Vie 'accepted, and that the two
thotout d - dollars *ere Ws. The gentleman
the* d that the boy must put up the build
ing,la his employer was so proud of Ma
su thatlhe w illing l y gave him his time
sniiie him.-go:` • 1. • • , • '
tir
This studious youug'utrpenter became one
of the -trehiteete or the country. He
mat* fottone, and stands high in the m
teezit', ,_ , -•eveyybody i : while . his fellow op.
"pita . ; earl hardly_tearn food for himself
andlit by by . .bis'ftilylabor. • , • --„
~' l ' , .-' '' - . • -. 1
=1
the Untied Mato hr theiliaws Distiici at lENtszaiianla.
1: • LEATHER PAPER IN J
iNE OF THE Moat Interesting andpe-
Oeuliar productions of paper is , ,thatlwhich
is made to imitate leather. The surface lute
every appearance Of a finished Okini :With
extraonfinary firmness and elasiti,city,i and it
can be subjected to washing withbut any lit
jurY from thei*ater. These peculiarities ere
net so much due to ,the superior ! quality or
the material as to the mode of manufacture;
:the surfaces remaining intact evert. when the
paper Is ver,ythick,while with Us plipepAof
this kind soon' loses ita finnnetii, anti *fie
grain is impaired...- - '',l •
Japanese leather - pap . er is made, extensive
iv at Flangawi, near 1 eddo. Itl is made in
sheets of all centimetres in length and . 42
centimetres in width.- The paper Out of .
which it Is Kepared is ilia dissimilar to our
packing paper, and is made in -tainthern Ja-,
' pan, near - Nagasaki, and theneb taken to
other provinces, where it •is Manufaetured
into the different fonni for various nses.:!--f
The leather paper is inader,in the following
manner: It is dam p en bd ' arid laid in; pairs
i between two peculiarly'-- prepared fort*,
i
nnate of paper also, only More fli g hli; var
nished than orilitiarY, leather - paper ,i 1 they,
have a very strong surface coatimt, hht run
ning only in one direction.. .
• Before putting the paper iu these forms,'
the sheets are stretched a little iti• the direc
tion of their width: If. there- are several
sheets, they are rolled on a cylinitrical piece
of! woOd,•the grain of the paper rtinping ;in. •
an opposite direction from that of- thii wood;
,they are then unrolled' front thi4 °lva Cloth •
to keep them in shape, and' put into &form
with a hOle in the top large enough to till mit
the end of the wooden cylinder. i The roll of .
paper is then subjected Vs a pressitre of :45.f0r
300 pounds.. After the roll has been' reducen
-to three-quarters. of its original length by •
this pressure, it is taken out of the presS 'and
turned, -The , folds flattened, outi and again
pressed to remove the deep Marks. _ . - ,
- After passing. the paper thrOugh rfdier s
several times the upper surfiree acouireli the
appearanee la leather: it is then . colored;
- oiled • with.ja kind of rape semi oil, - IVar ,
„nished, put once. more in thel Press, Nrhich •
-completes it with the exception of' dy,frig.' , ---.
. By, means 'of parallel' or cross lines on the,
ridlerithe upper.stirface of the paper ismile
to resembles leather exactly iniall-itsxirie
ties. The paper Wilk pressed to'one-third,.
il
or even to one-half its original thickpess,
and the:passage through the rollers p.iying!it
4 tine grained appearance, makes it valuatile
to picture printers, a' the surface has the ale ,
pearance of crepe silk. • •
, There is - another, variety of leather paper
which is •smooth and. transparent. , resem
bling hogskin. very much. Thik is manufac!'-.
turgid by a firocess or hammering,! and is,the
highest priced, costing 27 cents per sheet,
while the oilier range; 'from ,8 to 14 cents,
some' very tine selling at S cents; per sheet.
,- .
HE' MORMON,/ (I: 7 IIItEICCY..---: The
Mormons reached Salt :Lake Vallee. iu
an utterly' rimpoverishisl - * Th'e
cash capital of the entire. comniunity would
not probably haVe exceeded t,1.0b0. The OA
ifornia migration . furnished thiAn a Market
for their surplus proAracts: but as they had
but small Use Mr money, they preferred tak
ing of the miners instead, somiithing whigh
they could either eat, drink or Wear, not pro
curable ht Jamie. As they increased in num
bers and menus, merchants established theta
selves among them, thus enabling thenCro
use theirsnaall stores'of money in the purehal , :e
of needed supplies. Their great fjjstance froin
market. and the small propOrtion pf tht;ir
crops which Would bear transportation; have,
however. at all times made motley extreine
ly scarce ; and have led to the perpetration of
complicateda and often amusing systeM OF
barter. Hundreds of farmers, living, in rea
sonably comfortable circumstances, and ,rea
sonably
large families . to - clothe ;mid educate ; .will
not see - a dollar in money for years. Such 'a
farmer wishes to purchase a pair of shoes for
his wife. He consults the , shiTemaker who
avows k hfii willingness to furnish the same for
one herd of wood.
.11e has no - Wood, but sells.
,
valf fur a quiintity of ticiorieg, the «d‘As:for
'an order on the merchtint payable in goods,
the order fora load of wood„und straight Way
the matron' is shod: Seven watermelons
Mirairse a ticket of admssion to the theatre..
He pays fdr, the tuition of his childreiseqn:
ty-rive cabbages per 'quarter. The dressma
ker receives for her services .four squashes
Per day. He settles, his Church dues in epr
ghtun -molasses. Two" loads of punipkini+
pay his annual Subscription to the newspa
per. He buys , a "Treatise on Celestial Mar
riage" for a load of gravel and. a bottle of
soothing-syrup for the baby with 'a, busherof
string;beaus.' In this primitive method, un
til the advent of the Railroad, was nine
tenths of the busineSs of the Territotz
tn
dueted. And even now, in the retnot
-a majority, of all transactions areihf
`this character. The merchants, purchuslng
their good+ in New York orj San .Frincisco,
must, of course, have money to pay for the
same; but Ries sell their goods for cattle;
.riour, and dairy products, which are -then
.[
'Marketed for cash intheadjoinin g mining
fierritori—Fronz "Salt Lake .City," in
Ore rbpal Monthly for September. •
• Duntso the reign of lames 111. of
land, and •at his court; there' lived a man
- double above the waist and single belowthat
region; The King caused him to be earefully
brought up.' ; He rapidly acquired a know
ledge of musk; the two heads learned sever
al languages'; they debated together, and the
two halves occasionally fought. They lived,
generally; however, in the greatest harmony.
When the lower part, of the body was
the two individuals fell, it together, but when,
on the other hand, one of the upper individ
uals was touched, he alone felt the effiTt.
Thistmonstrous being died .at jo ie age of '.'"S
years. One of the bodieS died several days
before the - other. Of twins who have united
back to back, the best known instaice is that
'of the two Hungarian. sisters, 4-filen arid.
Judith, who were thus fixed; they - were
born in 1700 and died in I'resbu4 in 173..
aged Z. Some disorders they hadmseparate
ly ; others,. as small- pox and measles, to
gether. Judith,.alwaym feeble, -sank under,
disease of heart and chest ; Helen, who pre
served her'health well to. the last,- felt her
own strength
.suddenly fail;
,though her
speech remained. entire, and, after a brief .
death-struggle, - she died with her. ' ;
ALMI.D 4 ti EDUt - ; - ATIOIN.—Hure As rieh
man's son,, whti has been educated at great
expense and pains, who ha's graduated front
college, and has One out 1 gentlemen:, Ife
has studied , not with p view of fitting
I~ff di
self for - any avocation in life, lyst with/the
view of -being a gentleman..."-He reads, not
for the sake of , knowing anything, blit'fot
the sake or being - k geutlewaifi soon his
father'lbreaks down ; and , lie, when he -is
,abourtwenty-five years old, he finds him
self a'Poor man's son, and dependent on his
own exertions. And he says tei
"What shalt I do fora living?". licasks his
feet,' and hiyeet sayt•l do not know." He
asks hands, and they say—"l- do not
know." He asks his head, and it says 7 L'" I
never learnt an,ything how about to get -a
living." There is but one wan that can be
friend this poor wretch, and that isthe sex
ton.. Could - anything.be more useless than
such a person? - Could there be - anything
more pitiable than such histories? And yet
theyare happening every day.,
.. . !
INM. - sTity.—Man must have occupation,
or be miserable. Toil is the price of sleep.
and appetite--of - health and enjoyment.;--
The very necessity which overcomes our,
natural. sloth is a' blessing. ! The whale
world does tiot 'contain even a,briar or thorn
whirl}`nat 're mild" haVe spared. 'We are
happier w th the sterility which we can
t o
overcome b industry, than we could have
been with - e. ntaneous plenty and unbound
ed profusion. - The body and the mind.are
improved by 1 the toil that .fatigues them.
The toil iq a thousand times rewarded by the
pleasures which it bestows. Its enjoyments
arepeeuliar 143tt0 wealth can purchase the.tir
-i-no indole ee can taste them. -They Now.
only from be e xertions which repay the
.
laborer. .
- , f
THE - Nosit—The nose acts like a custona-.
c
house officer to the system. t. is highl y .
sensitive to .the odor of the m t polsondus
substances. It readily detects h (OA. hen
bane, monk's-hood, and the plan contain:.
hit prussic acid ; it recognizes the rtid smell
of drains and warns us motto smell the 'pal
luted - ale: • The nose is so sensitive that it (lis
-1 tinguishes air containing the 200,006 th part
of a gmin of the otto of,rose, or the 15,000,000 th
part, of a grain of %musk ? It tells us in tee
, morning that - our" bed-room's ate ittipare.
and catches the first (resume of themorning
air, and conveys to us the invitation of the
'fiawers , to go forth into ; the fields and inhale
' their sweet breath. "To be led by the nose."
' has hitherto been used as aphrase of reproach;
but to have a good nose. and to follow its
gdtdance, iscwe of the safest ways to the en
fun:tent of h3trilth. • -... • 1 '
— iires n I
TUE. - great the
Gonzalo woods. ore
said to be the most extended and awful con
thßgnOlona ever witnessed by those lividg in
the Provinces. • Seven miles were recently
swept over near Toronto, wherein'ir loup
es, Wm, and most of the live s ' k Were
consumed. A
1 . .
?'"
ia
II
PA N. -
~iLCOILOZ .d 3 Aggn
REPORT O,N .THE USE OF STISLULANTS By TUE
• • pito}4}:wms.
A .
T the Annual ,eeting , or,tlie "Metlieni
-
In
SoeietY . of the - Stite of Pennylvania;
held In . june, NOS,' Doeton4 H. ,Corson, W.
W. OM nsend, anti J- L."Stewairt were - up=
-pu ut o report, on tlid-fol owing , re . solution
ofre,red by Dr. :Corson :=. - •
... : •
"Resolved, That the prm t errible errible practice Of
stimulation; which send:tits vlUnlit dell); by thou
sandse
prematuftely to the gray and which fills our
' land with tlilltkeni/6.L Whi ,C ilie. cannot much
longer suatntaluself Itithe confidence and esteem
of the rinecting members of a great and learned
'profession. .A nand' fled. • lutproved; regenerated,
practice, based upon eon:Orion sense and a sound
clinical oirservatitm.raust. - take Ite .plaise.• and thus
tarry healingotl blessings upon its" Wings Au the
.nations.td- th earth.-- ,- .
The untie - tied (Tii..Mteivart disse tiiing.).
big leave to. er t . he - fdlio*inr , • -
: • itEPORT:i ,-
- Thai us the language of Prof.esotinus the so
ber, earnest. utterance .of Samuel D. 'atom, of
the Jefferson Medical College, before artltudlence of
thousands of Ills felloW-citizens,aman Who weighs
well hisaiords,.and whixtut 1 6 ngthened.life and great
medical experience, entitle his deidarations to pro
found respect, we feel bound to consider it carefully.
The declaration, If true, Is. appalling: If erroneous,
it should be corrected.
.That the. use of alcoholic '
stltutiLuats does sendita Viettmsdally. bylhousands, •
prematurely' to - theltrnve, and tills the.land with
drunkenness and esinte,ltit one doubts. • The query. arises—Are :, physiciens . o>ponsiblefor t h is!—
The medical rgofe.ssion is one n[ great 'antiquity.' of
high• honor, and commanding Influence over tile
opinions Mut habits of the mopte,•ln all that regards'
favorab:S - , or unfavorably, their health, or leteitt Ito(
life'. ln all ages and in all countries-the " fi, Heine .
Man7;-has eon t rolled the. minils•of li is; people in rela
tion 'tp the safety or danger of all their articles of
toeiti• or. inelicine, -The profession is spread over
evCry foot of the civilized, world;. its Members are
weleomc visitors in every family ,'-their teachings
are medical gospel, rec. Ivied in the (hiltless of faith,
..
and actosi out oh the principle that self-preservation
is the tl rst law of nature, - Does' the physiciansay the
health of tin, infant or its mother. demands that It
should betaken frotn.its breast, "though.'tis joy to
yield it is-'tis joy fo si p . ?" she makes the sacrifice.
Does he say, a'journey to and residence 'ln . a distant
and foreign country are lli.sential to 4he restoration
of the health of tile' diseased rind enfeebled \vire? she
separate:slier:4-1f from her home:OM all its Idols to
gain the previous les-m. Is DM Inv:band and-father"
told 1.,y toy physician. 411:11 the .chill, lank hand of
consumption has tiold.of Mtn, and -that nothing but
absenee from his be elltifill liollllt.k and IV reSiili'llee
for yetirs in the frozen rrgions.of NI in aesota or Lake
* superhw eith loosen its . grasp,„?.- not a moliient does lie
lieSitate—his busine s s 4; stopped, hisbome is aban
doned, and, tilled with hope and a holy belief that it
is a solemn) diltyftWprerttjel his life as long as possi
ble, he leaves bchind'hini all that have been dear to
him; and hies him onward to hlsSdreary, and deso--
late lomfe in the midst of 'strangers, that his health.
ii my be reslin e. d, T he - pho t cot tag el . wlt o can barely,
by the hardest labor and greatest freleality. procure
the necessaries of life for h is- fain ily, *hen all are in
health, should tvl,febr eliii;dren get' tsiclc„Ston'A not
on account of expense,htt t confiding lit the skill of
iii, physician- places the one iii lots hands and cal m .37
and humbly sit Mu I is to whatever of sacrifice may be
necessary. for its...preservation. .lii every country,
with every grade of_society, among high and lots-,
rich and pobr, learned and unlearned, this pith in
our profestlon, this submission to our opinions, this
.acaukseenee in the.,retnelics we , 11p,, iiitc . and the
hyglenie measttres we ad VISQ Is gtv'n with it read I
. tics, which shownliou• grr i
at, s t ite.• 'rem-nee of thy
medicalprofession,' .. .
lii times whim chute ra, or. t yph ti, eWl.,:,•i , h , ll)l.fever
or stnall.-pos. or malignant ilysen-try...pre- .11
-.. — . - -
. .
. ..-, o..preralli no
Man will . 1. - , be- 15 id or drink:said by his -physic has'
to be.harmful. Hal f ..a eentury ago, do& even now,
in some dist rlet s of vomit ry, . no toot her tv, at ld'a How
herr chi Id, a til led: With- rueiCtles, to take a single
`swallow of col , water: allhough the little .sull , ring
creature pie -u. in most piteous tones for a di-ink tit
snit its f'a retied null Muni ng 0100th. Why dia she
refuse; Its Because the ,Its•tor said .: it lentil inak.•
the measles strike In and ILIA the elli Rt.': Even here.
where t he'phySician was clung, t he fa ithWas whole,
I rt-is:; . ..`, wh e n Mt' ANlA.ooe,iitnent first invaded this
country, every fthysielan -was besieged by swamis
of people be to he informed how thee should
live .^.O as:10 avoid the• o,•srflenee., Clothing, -food,
and drink-all -were regulated by the - fiat .if the I lOC.
tor. and no (qui fai led. to earry out his ill reet lona to
the very letter, - p.ven the veriest quacks--nerve pre
tenders .•-eontrolled masses of people who believed
in them. The "Cholera Physician of Montreal" (as
I tr•steph im Stay reg. an eee--nt He 1 t Inertia d altor,
WAS culled , lit., I Ith Mired's-of people crOwd i ow - around
W. house to Kl 4 adVii.i. Mill 111 - 61feille. and 'kvery
cherishe , l, mutt-Indulged 'habit WAS flung. aside, If
told that it tended to in the slighted, degree to pre
dispose ti an attach: of - the dreaded zosindy. The
love of life ismayersaT, and if the-united, unbroken
voice of the medical professdoo could be beard tilde
minclation of arty article oftliod "or drink, Intr. eon- -
sumpt ion would soon be:at• an 'end. Witne4-.the
effect of-a lucre snare:Mtn i hat - there mar he danger •
from Pati nte - pork raw or Itnperfectly choked. Thou
sam Is of liersons•fear to 'eatnt lit all, even though
eookealso' t hOrOughly that no trichl na could live un
der -se great a heat. The bare supposition - that one
ought still Fly . .land b taken - into the nystern deters.
(hero. • I /. therefore- physicians weceunited 'on the
subject of the'ddleter ous'effifias of alcohol, Would it
not betitterlYabandoned"? :We venture . to affirm
that In IC ,A thfirlanilf it centhry..whett these who
we have fatally indoetrinattxl into the A . - it - diet that it iswarming , warming, cooliog, strengthening, toulcf.and sit to a
.lati ng-t hat it:calms the-restless ; e - ..W ... genli the dull,
inytgomten the body.ttiveistr,ength he intellect,
enlivens the fancy, and brightengtitelmagination
that it prevents sicknein, and' s a sovereign remedy
In diseaseLwe repeat; when thossjhus deluded shall
"aye passed away, the n'-w generation, whose minds
had not than been poisoned by error, but who had
listened in ,blank, asto a I sh Men t to the-wondrous re
cital of the Miseries wit ch its reputed mhderate,
judicious use had brought upon inankind„woutd in
stinctivfdy turn 'With horr.or.frorn contact with an
evil no.feafttl. ' - " - - •:-
.; : •
- - }lverjr writer on this dis . eases of flash:in - nail system
has testified to t lie direct. agency of
Of
stimu
lants In producing A large number Of diseases, and'
predisposing, by its use, to nearly all -otherm, or at
least to,onaktng the, ay st em lens 'a Je tare:4lst t he ne
g ion of deleterblunngente Da We hear You Say, even
if such are effeets„can its almont'universal use be
charged upon. the profensiorr! !Let facts answer.—
&eery physlelan whom weknow personally; ail of
whom we have heaid, use and recommend the use of
alcoholic liquors in- sonic form in their practice.
The great majoritYuse them freely; in triffingll.9 well
as In grave eases; .on drutikardeas -well' an on -the •
total abstlneocti people; on the child of a -day and -
the parent of three-score and ten- They) prevrthe
th' in lo.diseases Of the kidneys, lutigs, Mart, brain, '
stoinach,gmd every other organ, nod yet they know
full. welLt hat thei,lisearies of those organslhave been
woduced thousands 01 tittles by toese very agents.
They also reeomniend them to lie taken by the
weak, the dyspeptic and the. valetudinarian; -the
aged tveause they arc aged, the young because they
are young, the nursing mother buse ott he drain
on hee system (natural - though it ho and healthful):
.to those who and given no as hopeless, because they
'are dying, and to the einvolescent,"het -- 'sinire they are
conralenring, and they: cannot"forego the glorious
opportunity to show them' how - porter,i or ale, or
- whisky will build them up." The effect- of such • a
courSe In to Impress the cotninunlty with gi high
opinion of the t, atuabissmedleal. Iffegiving. proper
ties of the cartons alcoholic drinks, of which Wine,
in its lynaleties, bratidy, gin, and- whisky', make - up
the do neon stock.: • • - • / •
You - must all have observed - that- persohs le:Wing
home, to Round the sun - truer-in the - Country, or at the
sec-shore,-or .in - the•Jerscy-pints, or onthe moon- -
Minn . :or-at a toxin:try hone invariably found to ,
Imre brOught with them„bv direct ion of Tiny physi , .
-clan," some "good brandy," or "real Holland gin,"'
'or.a few dozen ' brownstout," of - Some- Of the tine
"Old port." , Many who take hone at Matte. now "by
advice ofour doctor, bring,it along' to keep off - chills,
to prevent the deleterirms effects of change of water;:
to fake-a
-little morning and evening on, accOunt of
the dews, or a tittle at noon to help digestion, and h-•
is truly painful to a thinking, constgentitiusjhan, to -
-nee what confidence they hsvo In the pre.seryative •
• and. remetlial qualities of theke articles so. carefully
!stowed away int he t rbilic.; The parent who at home
would shudder to see his child take a dittle -brandy
lot eactulteal, now under the arlia'ef of his physician'
:deals out to every member. of - his family this life.
preserver;" this diseuse-detter. lie it still more im
pressed:Oath the 'Value ofktheseiremedien from - the
fact, the while the doctor tr.. 0.40 careful to was the
itilportanee of tali:loathe ' - alcoholiesiabang. be said ,
not 3i:word about the necessity of taking - Soma melt
eihnSfsrl-called,•valuable in attaekkofpain, or vont-
Itinpfettr dlarrhcca,Or lass of appetite; or chills, or
fever, or headache. lit tills omission the atient
~e estt•facit• aettlowledginent that the stimulants in
-his quttles are :substitutes fc*,them and better than
%heed all. Who tan estimate the amount- of Injury .
. than: brought upon nociety 2 Take a-seat In it i ai I
roaacar on any cif the long lines of tray- I, see the
pnasengers as they rouse themselves In the _morning
when the sun is jtist lighting up the mountain-tops.
The carpet-bag, is unlocked and the old port, or -
brandy, or whisky drawn forth, and its owner,look. -
logtimidly at the fog:Just lingering over the fryer,
.preparathry .to being dissipated by the • glowing
beams of day drinks deeply, thankfttithist the anti.
dote for-fog is at hand. Ills neighbor:across the car
hitsalso brought, -from the 'depth of, bin overcoat
pocket a flask of whisky, "the reatarticle," and with
~,,a noble generosity - Ls haltding it about tO those near
s py, as something absolutely' treeensary 11 ) their &he
;le. if they expect to travel far, as his (Oct r told him, -'
fears, ago, always,tO have- it with him, in every .
railroad car-of thii thohsaffila which, daily traverse
• ourlmmense country, on every - sfearhship, that
ploughs the ocean. not one but.whose partisengern are
• treightel whh • aleoholic fetunnlants, prescribed by
...their physicians es Important .preyent I tlyts of, and
remedies, for, disease.. •
If, theh. thill picture 1)d-true:and not onecan gal n
aaytt, that, in every house in the land, on board
eyery,railroad car,farid on every ship., that sails or
!..stearns the ocean, this agent is used by -ridtace of (he
: profestfore,;-tis prevent ivenud curer of disease, should
- a astonish these who know - the cravings of appetite
and the force of habit, that, this terrible practice, in
the language ,of the - s nets thonsands
1 doily prematurely to the 'grave, and fills toe land
WWI drunkennese - anti:crime R• Look Into almost
any oft he - approved Works on the Practice of Meth
eine, and you wilt find that alcoholic drinks are.
named as' n. of the causes orairntrst every disease,
and yet "In the recent works these same de eterious
agents are lauded artrernedies ab we all . 0tt,Mg. , ...-
Some recommend. them. only- in convalescence: .
others in exhausted conffit (hos bet rrecottyaleneenso
\has begun, and yet others from thebeginnlngito the
end of the malady. With theutthey treat the
stage,, the hot stage, the stage of excitement, the
period of depression, deltruin coma, • leeplessneee,
and every other :condition that ni.ty, arise.. ' w,• they are givert • titi• arouse the :energies, then to a •ty
excitemeut, here as. a supporter - of • combustio
thereanicsnl.for the . 'serves; 1,110 , 1.1,!: to build up
'lft ...\,
the system by promoting .nerve-for ce;;-the next to .
pull it down by increasiorthe waste , of themes; or,
In froffil o nablelanguagedestroctive metamorphostn.
With their wotahh they -, feint every indica
cation, they combat _every nyeantoni,- and though '
they fail to conquer,- they are still on hand to he in;
at the death. Among all ournequaintrinceweknow -
of t o physician who dolin not - preserihe and recom-.
mend them more or leafs, -.The time wits, and many
:of YOU con -remember, - - it, when they were lrecom
tnenderih,Y teachers irt tirsticine only in wen': states
of the Wdy, anddo be used-with extreme 'emit iorf ;
now; - when . the' bruin ts , overpeiwed by sunstroke,
when the mn falls prostrate with apoplexy, in the
first as in the last days or-,lllness spotted, typhus,
typhold i Or yellow-fever, In' Variety of diar
rhoea and dysentOrysln• rhea/mat tn, to pleurisy, in
Pnenntbnia, In the snockbyArdurr from violence
a mania-a-potu. and. delirium--tremens, In - the;
sleeplessness brought on by - the use of alcohol, in
the nervous diseases ,of - females daring gestation
op
-after delivery, and daily during the .nursing
k si, "wine or brandy', gin or whisky, or
.. IgnorsZone or more of the .various tlne,t Or
. bitters, tug with alcohol, is prescribect and u .
wlttiwestness' which tfttilleeto lb.:faith re
rosorn .
posed liftbeurby tho . .phystelan. and -which allays-
she-repugnance - of the patients ' to, the u-si of an '
agent which they had seen lilting the land with
drunkenness - and crime. Daus a- chlki guff-Flo:An
quail, or scarlet fever, orillptheria. the bedding-up
-.process must not be. nftlected.:-disregard the in
- ilarnMatiott,' keep up the strength.: It to. a blood
Poison, - says auttiority,,T. arid whit yo% send the
iodinee, the bromides or chlorides through the body'
to wrestlei. , wlth' tie poison, give - brandy - toddy,
whisky:yokels. Wine 'Sad inft'f=tea to keep .up the
strength, and ris the poor child: with a, ping in its ,
Grind-pipe which preventitaccess of air to the lunsok
strnor breath, pout do wn the ; brandy, wine .
or whisky ' • For **att . The answer comeanotjor
realcmgcok experience- have not:tele-give. But a
short time id nee a friend oristrs. a gentleman front
;.juladetptita.. told ns that a son of his , of ten years
of age; at by two Of the drat Phyalelans of
that enlightentileity, in of diptherik.had so
. much brandy urged upon 'dm, whew the mentbr use
had invaded the windt,' that - during the lug few
bowl of his life as he entail bed he would
__,throw__
'torillte amts And r'3 , , ." MO% bold uteri AM swim.
.‘a
•
SINGLE
_COI CENTS.
--
I ming, I will tali out abed." Hs was drunk from
Windy,' when all Clint heneeded was the removal,
of the Ding from,his windpipe. Should any doubt
this statement.. we refiirthetri-to a ease•publishist
the A lIERICSIS JOURNA LortitV SistatcAL.Bcts:scxx
at pace' 24. Of the number for 'January, but, 'by a
physician of honored name; himself the ant hor of a
treatise on the "Plseases of elaftdren." The patient
a child of ten yea* was well till the - evening of the
dth 'Of April. Nett morning complained 'of sate
throat and - leas of appetite. - In' the afternoon the
doctor-saw him with symptoms of scarlet fever or
iliptherla, as yet so- Illy defined as to leave doubt..
And now lesiethan twenty-four hours froth-health,
`and when a febrile condition was Just beginning to
manifest itself, coning - the physician , with salts in
One. band and brandy In -the other—ten grains Of
sulphite, of magnedia, and milk-punch every two
Nekt morn' tut at I the likmptoms were aggra 7 .
vated—the inflammation of throat and skin Intense;
but at ill-the salts In one hand -and milk-punch and
beef-tea. a wineelassfill of each of the latter &Ber
-1 nately ever] two hoo ray in the other . -.And soon,
day. after day. till the dry and Inflamed throat'
would not permit si drop of those Ilfe , preservers to
.pass... But nothieg daunted, the beer tea, brandy.
and anlphitenf 'magnesia are forced up.the rectum
-(thank IleaVen for Wel doctor's chance of bases;)
thy lee which; surrounds the throat; now that the
fiery liquid Is kept away -soon cools It, relieved the.
inflammation', and me - throat again becomes the..
• channel to the stomach: For eleven days this ter
rible treatment went on—milk-punch, - -or 'inanity
and beef-tea every two hours—and then resulted ha
a condition from which thelittic sufferer barely -
eseaped with life. • , . . • • -•
r mention. this .Clibe. as the -type Of the presentl .
-poirt St' inulant'irttaithent, and because the pub
lication' of It mill 'cause a similar • treatineat toles
applied to' thousands of little sutlettral The at . ..y- 1
will he raid at, home and abroad, and the name of-,
the eminent physician and author will be a antti
diem' guarantee l'tti those whit are convinced high
authoritiea of the s eorreetnesa of a, ptaetlce) that
brandy was. - use•to his case ; and. -as a curiae- "
quenee. every c41.1(1 that (MIS in their - way sick•with
scarlet fever or dhitheria must be dosed with brandy.
Allow ua to statearmat mm ier case, to-show how tide in.,.
discriminate rise and recoendathin of alcohol is
propagated and. trials 'to results so deplorable that
Professor, limas was 3cOmp• lied to cry aloe' in de
nuneiat ion of
• • - . •.
- At page ale,of the October number of the NtIitDICAL
AND St7RUICA L for Ism, 1.5 r erns Uele, ot
Centre (saltily. reports one ease of vaifittng duriffe_
pregnancy in wh tell, after trying a few of the usual •
remedies, he resorted to gots! rye whisky, .one tea- .
spoonful with -three drops tincture of aconite, three
times daily, and Says, "It acted like a "balm, the .
whisky beitig.the first. thing' to give tone.to the,
stomach." lie Ravewhisky and aconite for'-two
,weeks, but there iv, not a word of plaise for the •
aconite. The icieuan and her friends and the mein- •
eat profession. as -faC•as tile communication nue
reach, are to regard- the whisky as the- rented tat
ageriti We have no ht•sit evict* ut s4ty rut that thou
sands of preguatit women (rill be indutteffiftiel urged'
lay the putdicat ion eel this singleetise to IRV alcohol h•
drinks (or the relief of an affection, which has rarely •
'resisted mild , and - ;lntruiless remedies in the:bands
*of experienced physlcianS. This glowing report,—
too, is based on a single ease, and In which the relict
might properly haver beers attributed to the,effect of.
the aconite on the nerves of the stomach.
• One!more cage: Two Nteeks 'since' a gentleman
• gave tui the tdlowing ,h istory:--LastAleeember his
daughter,' If about Atveety-oric years, was taken
with pate In the side, and ashetual lost t h ree daugh
tent within a few years-of - cimslimptiori, he, after
the secotutday'stliness lett Idsliame,. eight Miles
fronePhillidelp. in, and 'moved to - the city and played
her tinder the Care of irphysielma of some mats etwo:
Ile diagnosed pheitmon in. and atones) put. heron'
he. use of beer, alt., and whisky, She died in the
early parhitf., May, titter great sutibring -aid In dc
'spite of twenty-tour quarts. id the liestc did rye '
whisky and an Matilda 'ice of peer Mid ale. As the
sister who di Irene y ear lishire only took - teu`,kal-'
10115 of wine,duntuther illness. it was - hoped Butt a
heavier st strongerl RI UOr Might toroVt •
more strei 681111, hence the substitution of .whisky.
We mention t freseeases because they show the pres
ent terrible praetiee sttniulatlon, and-not to throw
dits4redit en those who eoffsalentlousiv treated them.
This disposition in - phy r shianis to pres`eribe oleo'-
,holfi , 'quoulants ti every variety of disease received ,
seVere rebuke' !root lir. slarnuel Wilkes in a lecture
to his large class of sttidellis.Mlitered In a London
.liosutts•Wtwo years 'Sipco. 'We regret that. ve can
present may brie weir:lets: Ire said "I should 4r •
cony to Say that tlie 'doctor pamleis to the piddle
taste, since he is too often' fu :141.4'34 with it. • [hit
t hisagreetnen I bet Weett 110e1.1r . and pidient resolves
Itsel flair this. An'extra.stimuhint Is presents-it s
~ft
matters little what is nature Of the- disease.
since the reasons for the treat meat are alipllcnbleyn
all coMplaints, ante are:founded On this simple
preposition : All persons aho are 7 i,B are weak.-=--
- They haVe lied - strength: they require It 'to be. re
st ored, Aleelhol Is ii so prtorter tunic; .11terilore
,aleohbl Isa remedy foh, al t diseases: • This isms pa is
odY. for constantly. hear medieat Imm:say they
give brandy to nil their - patients, for they always- •
find them tore. Morcover, it is a tiled Trine of which
the patients approve, ansatto mg aiS they do In, sup
porting and strengthening pave:', Too cannot,
therefore, do better, if you have - no. compunctions •
fat convertiati your prat . ..Klima, into a Mere trade, than
to say (oath your patients, after feeling %-hbir
that they are very low; that you, are sure that they '
tlo rot take enough, and order them several glasses • -
-of vglne daily - Should they . he' exceedingly 11l with Al
some desperate organic complaint', you must turn
your remarks ;o the friends, and speak er the neces
sity ratsappoaing the patt6tr by giving him as much
'brandy not can be poured down his By tiffs,
method you are sure to give satisfaction, for should
the patient die without -such treatment, you rdtY
he blamed for let tAng'him slip through your hogers,
whilst if he die with it, yeardilive dime your.bAt tin
their opinion.) -'This would be a 'comfulable and -
lucrative mode of practice." • ' • `s -
- lii adrift ion to the regular prescriptions by meth
cal :nee of alcohol, the use lay their advieebf Tinc
tures, Plantation Bitters, Scheid:ma Sebnaipm.Sto-'
marhics, cordials,- etc., all of which - are Strongly
altoholle, Is almost- universal. They produce,the .
exhilarating e ff ects of moderate intiixication and -
entreader an appetite for - rum. In all thrgand
set:multi have butsine sslnitaryinstitutlon In which 7:
alcoholic drinks die regarded HS always a aunse, and
- never a remedy for disease. They are titled - lavishly "
In nearly all our BosPitala, jails, almshouses, and
asylums, as Is shown b'i tit —ports frOntfltose lir , •
tit Buttons. There wait purchased for use in chwriliF ,
adelphla Almshouse in - -
'Wine, 359,4 gallons, - at a cost-of +1.'31044 S 7
Whisky, 181-ffi gallons, ant enst
Porter, 111 barrels-1000 gallons,„m a costbiz: (ii-
• . .37989 td
Making a cost of SOVVII I.IIOIIKII/111 nine hundred and
eighty-1)111. 1 dollars unit forty-two ycnt.4, c*elualve
uf the cord for alcohol. . _
In 1807 there WiL4 purebased _
Whisky, 41 , 57 gallons, at Cost .....
Wine, 4 - 5 gallons, at a cost 0f2513 . :At
'Porter, Pia barrels—tol2 gallons, at .a ro,Cl,of.:i. 124.! iMt
•-•
;4yil its
Milking a total'of six fluids:nut four Titifid;cif MO
eleven ijollars nod eight rents, exclusive of the cost
of alooThol, which always goes into Medi= it:vomit.
In the Pennsylvania llompitalvßeptart'forAlie year
emting 4th mo., an h. IS6 - 7, 1 fincl they - 110# amount
for medicluestscas Sattii . 77, whiChMotibtlegs includes
alcohol, and chemicals, while the
Wine. ... ........ ... . ........
SpirihiCost
Porter and mineral wati-r
. . , • -
. . -
. .
• '1" - .µ. tr. , z2.'i2l ot
,
>lnking two thous:4kt fOur lini.dx,ovaiwYwerrty-rou, ,
dollars and ninety-nue vents forf:ttlt44.lttlits alone:
- exelus - Iye of the aleql-tol, which •wtitfiti swell the
amount greatly and rudil.:Q_l4ll. 7 drug' bill in proinr
.llon. i
•. In the report of no- state Litnittie -Itospitul to!'
1 . A48, I find:— , - .
rust
Pure , old rye Whisky, ,*(r4
=INSIMM:C=RM
- -
- Att tttcr four hundred and Path' . dollars and
I,lxty-tiont- cents, white drugs, chemicals; -and medi
cines cost only two tntndri d nod thirty7four s dollars
antiseventeen cents.
. And this Is the report 'of glee doings of 'an hist ltii
tion under the control - Tit:Attie tit' the most hunian e
And enlightened physician's of the State, one, too.
who alinost,entlrely ,repudiate, the - times Ity of
stimulants, ekcept in a single: tarnimf Insanity: ..In -
1111. Pennaylvania, If we - could have'the reports front
every . nimshouse. Jail, insane as , s„iluiti, anti hospital,
we would react the same story, that brandy, whisky,
Wine, and perter were among thkleading inediclo es,
and cost more than all other rktredlas together. —
We know of but one single - almshouse -In which
not oue strop 4s used. Of it, we shalt stunk here
after, and shall ask you to' fake note of It, 4 ; . •.-
The useof aleoliolicilidiors by plrysl el., lASSeeIIIS to
be founded on - the poliutar rtoctrine and - 1 / I .lllef :that .
'they= nontish the body by su , cptylng platitleMaterial
r
or beat materlal4-o else in irectLy support i the sys
- tern by dirtilnising tnetit tittrphosbi or atomte
change; henco this class of remedies Is'spolien of
45 supporters Of •,vltal , heat, food for the nerves,
generators ef force, etc..ptintl is filled with a
vague Idea that strength anti' biCre set!- health arc
the resultsof .their use by persons in health, thus
warding oil disease; and that 1p the sick, In whom.
they say s the vital force is always depressed; they aid
'in susts.ming it. - This lit a 'popular doctrine; and,
were it' not that it has lei to fatal results, It would be
amusing to witness the satisneirair of those who 4r ,
tri rimiihantiy prateabout giving brandy and whislty.
as food for the nerves, to build up the system, to - pre,
vent metarnorplitiSis, etc,. We utterly repudiate tilt;
- doctrine.' We deny' that a I tartlet increases vital force,
is food for the nerves, or is indispensable in Rick
.floss or In health. •.
Ur, Kennard. Kennard. of
.anarticle. in the • .
-Mkt - in:AL A itentri, on - aletilwi.
-may be the exact nature of the deleterloms„nuent ' •
alcohol :Leting: urn the huritan 01I01)1.sm'. knoll
'that it affectserent twit chin:ifs:ln very different
,degrees; but uricapt dermwing ihr, nerrous sliders.— •
seine persons are injured, by it in even the soul leSt ,
quantity, seine are rapidly poisoned by. its abuse, ,
while others are, s ery slow to experience its baneful •
effects. It creeps upon them slowly • and • utictm
'scieusly, and its temporary soothing and exhilarat
to areetel delude its victims w itli . the belief that it '
g
is the deficiency and not tile exces4 of amount takeo.
which gives rise to all the miserable symptoms -
chrttnicalcoholism " Professor N. S. Davis, who has • ..
with much propriety been called the Father of the
Xtnerlean.sledical Assoclationi'in an "nusay - on't he
`.'"P - Arects - of Alcohol," :writes:—•• It is probable that
a very large majority of the people, even at the prey
sent time, regard 4lcoholte inks, when aken with -.
ninderatiun, tis tonic. neur . l"- g.wartni tr, and life
suktaining. the conserylit • mien t 'lbw&
and the milk - of age. T poppet , notiOns'are
strengthened on the one hand by the direct eat:tiler
ating etre - et or alcohol on the nervous system, and op • '
the ether by certain theoretical ilogtnaspromulgated
•ILY" - Liebig • Johnston,lllammond, and others. who
have boll proclaimed alcohol to be respirato ry acces-ory food: -Thin class of cheralcotphyliolomsts
„simply point to the feet that alcohol in itwchemlcal _
relations belongs to the clans of hy '
drotarbous : and
'that those sublet antes opt of thellYing body are co
hie of undergoing combust on; by uniting with oxY
,gen and they straightway Junintn, the conclusion.
that, when taken into the system; they actually en
.ter into like combination-with oxygen, andiltas be-- A
come 'respiratory food. , ' And yet we sear* in :pit ;
their writings. in viiins for the first item,nr proof
~h at their mere theoretical dethiction.s are correct.— ' ,
A more recent modifieattori of the theorimeitiantit
ing fronittblit school of writers makes! alcohol not
eespirtitory - but accessory food: It having been clear- -
ly proved,by the experiments of Bolter and others.
pe
that the presence of ah-ohol in the system lessened -
the atomic changes anti secretions in such 14 way as
to diminish the aura total of eliminations itt ,given
011ie: it wan at once assumed that the diminution of
atomic changes to the tissues of the body watt equiv
alent to just so much nutrition or addition of. new •
matter through digestion OriasSiMilatiOn• hence the. -
alcohol was declared to be acceilsory or indirect food;
a fallacy which will - be exposed hereafter." lie con
tinue. :—"Nite,have thus stated fairly the theciretlettl
doctrines of tub: class of men, because their names
are continually quoted , as autherl_ ty throughout -
departmentsof our literature. Let .us now see.hOw -
their theoretical assnrnptionsand popular notions
are sustained by a wide range of experiments anti --
osrefully observed facts: •
, ori rat. l'iumerous chemical analyies the blood
and different tisanes; made t_tytittiferent.experimentst -
.ers, show that, when aleoliollo-drlnknare taken. - tbe
alcohol enters the blood and penneatea with It every '
part of the body. This position la acknowledged I.'
be correct by all closes of observers. -
"6econd. An equally rillable series of experiments
have Shown that alcohol undergoesi o chemical ,
Mi
change lathe system. tls eilmuthrough the
excretory organs, more especially - tit lungs and
kidneys, Within a few hottrs after beinglaken.. This ,
'Position, though longsliAnited, wax tnlii - entablinhed
laye , teim
thltamt-the woll-deviser and corettillY , eze• e .
toted experiments ofiallernand, Perrin, and Imi-tor,' : 7 •,
m'TtilttL While in the' blood and circulating In the •
sYstem, the alcohol diminishes the sensibility of the -
brain and nervous system In the same Mannet.a.s. •
other antiotheties. . and also, retards the active °
ttlantan in all tktili tissues; andconsetrientlYdlinin- -
lsbes the smut total of elintinationsorexeretions
' a given period Of time. the numerous ltd patient
experimental Investigations of Pront, rag, Mid
•
Bodebaudat, Bolter. Tramniond and oth ' ' have re
moved. all doubts in ^regard to the ,t -of this. •
proposition: .
"Fourth. By diminishing the atozable. anges,ley •
the queen of the body and the Atect/t tY of the
nervous system. the alcohol, _by, also.
1
ME
Slit _I
, 121 :3
. 123 i )
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151' $9