The miners' journal. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1870-1873, September 24, 1870, Image 2

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    ORTY-SIXTH YEAR•
• •
• fr. dart SrECIALSOTICE9Dui betastrtrd Alphotetkiltylasier alp
'Lead, at 40 rata per Una, isscrUoc ; rd aorta • W. for 4rery
. lotkorquen,t lorertlaa.
. - - -
HANNAN .4 RAMKNY.—BnakKeiters and Stationerx
yes and Binders. WI Matra Street. PoPaellle, Pa..
Atistere Burn L .
SATURDAY, SEPTEMB ' 24, 1870.
- ,
111 E MINERS. JOURNAL isfiord every .Saturday
morning.„nd furnished to subscribers t 15 per annum, in
i m i vi mm„ or if not paid in advatlce. • • ,
- CLUB EL - Bscsixrnmxs—rsv.4Bl.A.BlA' Ili ADVANCE:
a col:les to one addrasiE 115 Q:9 to one address; 0000
' ” • 00 1 43 0)
•.• To News Dealers .4 Co per WS Curies. cam.
• ' Tol . 3lini•ters and Scbool Teschers'we will furnish the
Ira - AL. hy.mail, &tiling); per annum, in advance; other
wise at lUD rates.' -•-
. • • .
. TIIE LA ILY INETts , JOURN 7 A L ti. pillisbed evert
• werk"day Morning, Saturday's excepted. •
Tgßms—Tell cents per • week, paystiio to the carrier or
agenl by,whan it Seemed:" • r
Bl /1-4•11,-•-PaYoule In advance, one year, 4. 5 00; air
yon Ws, Y: :5; three months, $1 54. I
DAILY ..A.ND WEEKLY,3III•4OI6"-30tItSAL.Z SO per
annu.m. In aovance: 4 4 00 for six ri r nttl '' • a • •
• •• • EOM MAN d. RAMSEY:l,Fblitheti.
Tn . . :ArpßOActivt-0 firJEelvahr.
EOM ET] .NO 'FOR OCE. 'WORK 174 01 EN,' TO READ
.LTIIOCGII theie •ia 'tint little excite
men(so far, but the approaching Con
gressional and also State election, is of vast
importance to the people, and• particularly
the producers of the country. Never,. proti:
ably in the history of this country, L as such
tremendouS efforts been made by the Free
Trade League, located in New-York, which
•
deriVes its Rinds from foreign manufactures
and Importers, to brenk'doWn the Protective
Policy: of, the :Country, .established by the
° Republicatiiiarty since the'Rebellion broke
out, aft4theyiphesine:d power in the coun-•
' try. - i'l7l4se foreign interests desire to break
(Town our .workshop; and manufactures, in
• order that ) they Cam- obtain our markets and
supply us with goods -manufactured and
produced by - the'loW labor" of Europe._ •
On'this question the people eannot.be mis
led any longer, The Republican pain and
the - so-called. DemoCratie party, have taken
'their stand openly and fairly on these ques
tions. !THE REPUBLtANS ARE.
PLEDtIED TO THE PROTECTION OF
OU It, HOM E L ARCM AND;, INDUSTR
..'HEMOC-fiATS STAND
PLEDGED TO THE FliEf.: TRADE POI:-
ANDt OF COURSE' ADVOCATE
FOREMN INTERESTS IN OPPOSI
TION ;TO HOME INTERESTS, We clial
h;ige:a. contradiction 'a tliN•position. The'
tote • ou'tb'eSuppicinettary Tdriff B w hich .
.• passed :at the last session of Congress, dud
Which is to take effect: on the ;first of January.
next, in which the dutie are increased on
• •
. t iff a ny articles,' and eqnalized „on shiers, and
which also reduced the duties on tea l coffee,
apdsugari was- It intercit of ProtOtion
:and opposed to Free Trade, anti Cr/
pabliCail in CtillgrOZ4 Voting, rteoilletl:litt
eon: for-This Bill, whiff (Teri, so-called
(~?ift voting; revordo his s:otrOi t r im!
This the record of ,•the prodeedings
prove. f:T)liit was a fair issue—the bkil was
fought inch by. inch hy, the whole 'free trade
party, and fs , now 'denounced by the ,Free
Trade League , and • leading • Dennieratiepa*-
- - pt:rs, and ther. :ire ales dy marshaling their
forces to repeal it tit thd_ next , session Con
gress ; and they if they can: There -
s.as sonic difference among . the Republicans-
(in the 4 details of din bill, but after it had
incssed the Committee on the Whole by the
• !tepid;licims,.they, as a patty, vottd solid for
-• it, and the Democrats as a party, voted solid
againsdt.. This is the - official recordovhich •
canoodle. We are aware that many eandi
. dates of this • party;. in
,districts where
the people a i re in' favor of, Protec-•
-tion, Will declare that they are Protee
- - -%tionists 'also. This is a lie. The;.,- can
- iiO•tbe, Protectionists while they -adhere to'
atid vote with a party that is oppond toPro
- tection. If Amon is in favor •()f a cherished .
• measure, While•his neighhors • are opposed to
it, and fie voted for th6friend of his.:opponent
,
and give hini the poWer to - defeat 'his cher.
• ished ineasing,-Would he not he Put down as
-• ht fool or a msdnian, • :, - -and Very deservedly
_too? Wlieneer a, so-called Democrat says
he i" a friend of Protection, ask liiri► how he,
can act with La peaty; that, wheneverrit
the power, liasialways voted down . and tk
'‘ . " - -troyed protection to our hoine - labor :mein
dmstry? Ask him who l . epeaded the TariF
of 1'512.? Which was tlr- best Tariff we e 34.4
had .and covered the country with bit inks
and prosperity. -L Ask him' if.ltjwas not the,
tha , noemtic4party, which reduced the Wades
from "sf! a day and roast,beef," by the repeal
• of :tlitYt Tarilf , down to as low as 6U cents a
.day - for laborers, and from -FAI cults to I'as
• day for miners, while there were-thousandS
of persons who e; r iuttl.ibl get einployment at
even these wages, -which prevat
ed up.to lbtd, .:rwm,ands of miners and
laboters know this. Ask him whether-the
. Ikmoerats vote against the
, present
Tot:ifr Bill„in congress, and Ids° against the
:•4upplementaiyjaraßill at the last session?
- And ask hint - -if '11:e solicites, Your - vote;
Whetl he'tbinkr that you are '.•tielt a fool
vitte"for candidates to strengthen a par
. ty that is postile to interests, and thus
place power into die- hands of a party to be
used to de4troy hotnejabc:or . and 'home in
- Anstry for the benefit of - foreign nations?
These . are.-*pertinent question.• for every .
friend to home labor and home industry to .
yropoiiii(l the-;o-call-eilDentberritie eandi
dates •
.
We allknow that Rine-tenths of the•Lrish,
v•
an.l particularly Ow have Wicome
thcdaughing the whole country, be-'
• valse; while they profess grout lostility to
- England7by the votes in favor of the Free.
Trale Party they:iire..rcally the inOst valua
ble friends the English have in thiscountry,
because theyKote,:against the husiness of
their adopted equAtry and , in favor of that
of Englanil—inftiet they at•e the Gii4tcark o
proSperity in. th is: 'icount ry. 0
course snelf conduct • degrades trr i ent lire
-,estitnation all• thinking persongt, and that
tlie reason why there is so: stronng a dispo
sition manifested all parties to - ya loose
front
,them, - and -leave them .alone -in theii•
igintraiicv and foiiy
, •
The Nationaltli . jr last
Converition * held in Cincinnati, Obto,_put
the following • plank in —their •Platforin for
the first time.. It was hilt' advocated by the
intelligent member; of 'the ,Convention,
while bittery opposeil by some of the
tenders of the Fi've TrinTO DemoCats,4lto
crept into the Cop vention.i Sc,inie of its wk.°-
. truly declared that every measure sofar pas
sed fof,the benefit of-the working classes, has
been,.. -- pas . !4ed by the Republican Party of the
eauntrfsince • they have obtained the ass::
cendpney:.. This is trtit4erause evc - frprin-:.
• eiple of vital importance to- the country
which its embraced in the Creed of the Old
Deniocratie Party previous to 1S31), is 'now
.erubraeed 'in the Item:Mica:A - Party. After
.
ism tlic mass
.of • the - Democracy North,
joined hands-with the Slave power, land all
• their measures were . for the prescrvatiqn of
'slavery against free labor. But here lithe
• Plank : ' • ,
The tariff should - TIC modified admit the ne
• essitries of life and smh articles of common use
as we can neither •
.produco or grow, dutiesa . for
revenue to be mainly laid onartieles of ltitKU
ry; such 'articles us we bave thi materialin
ammtlanap will develop heresTAirces t of the
- esittutry,lherea.se the number of farlerte's,. g i ve
. -cinploymem to more laborers, eau's()
of skilled lalior, ereate h pprmanent
'home market for agricultural products,-destroy
- ..the necessity for odious and internal taxatioi;
and soon enabld us to.. compete witk the maml
fa”turers•
of Europe. • • •
.
is the most iiiiportant plank in their
' platform. As 'fziras wages are Concerned, ills
Worth all the others, beeause -it encourages
home interests; and largely extends the field.
. - '‘ot labor, gives employment to' all who seek
it,'itiatereates a deniatid for labbr,which
ett
. abb.s thOF•e whose fllly capital is laber to sell
,it. to the best advantage, and fix, the i lr
rr: terms. This plank, Itltliough violently op
, posed, Was slo powerfully advocated by its
friends that it,was adopted With only seven
nays recordo against tile' working
. men of the e 6 mitry,adliere to3 t his Plank, and
•103t,WiSh it AS .the policy7of the Coilntry -per
. • i i, i i n ently, they. will ilave bad ittleififfieul ty
in securing goo wages, au4fit witlbe.impos-•.
sible for eapitat d
to opprmplat'lly iteeplng„,
dimn the wages . ,of,labor Wow what the"
V;
_ought to be. When labor lilileuty, caPitid
controls prices. -whet' labo6.!S are scarce,
bor always controls capital, so taras _ to se
. .Cure what is their - litre. 'rhiS .
sensfble
person knows—"but to maintain that 'plarik,,
uo workingman or friend. 4 hOnie industry
can 'vote the tio , crilled_perialieratic - ticket,
. cause that tdank..lo..OPpo - : 3ed and denounced.
by ,the FreeTialle &gigue; and all the kid
- Democratic papers in tote country.
. . : The only -reason whY we have not hid
.
more ample protection heretofore that th
mass of Visingmen have voted with the
so-called tb: emocratid piny, and have been
elailmid its opposed to,exe Protective PoileY-
Thisis - the reason .why so many timid Re
pie:atoms in' - districts where the election has
been close, have been opposed to voting , for
ProtectiOn, believing that the workingclass
es, by so : many Voting for the. Democrats,
,
were opposelito Whir:eon. And if ete.Re-
Ipublican candidates who.faior- Protection
are defeated in the elm districts, it will be
proclaimed throughout the whole country
that a majority of the :people of. these dig-
Weis are in favor of Free Trade, and it will
greatly benefit thks policy in Congress.
jn another part of the Jot - to:AL; under
Stktistics of Foreign Commte and Naviga
:llii, it will be seen that wit ; imported last
year the following articles from abroad: "
Wool and Woolen Manntacturee, valued at $lllO4OOO
Iron and blanufaettnea. • ; - 23,400.000
cotton and Idanufactures,. " , " 22,000,000
Making an aggregate -
of $86,000,000 for
three articles Acme sent abroad that can be
produced at home iron? labor ,and industry
is properly piotected: -If we had numnfite
tured only one-balf the • value of, the above
articles In this country it would have em
ployed alt the surplus labor of--,the country
at good wages, and tla4hole number Of em
igrants also lantring - tuto the country; and
there would have beeln an inert*teed, market
for the% last two -years of \Upwards of
one million tons of !resat annually, which'
would have avoided mane of the conflicts
between the employers' and employees that
have occurred lately, because the 'demand
'would .'have taken all thit coal that, could
have . been produCed at, remunerating rates
to the miners and laborers, and also for coal.
The large increase of skeep also,to - pexice
'the wool required • for ,our home manufac
tures, would a 1 1.%) hugely increase the quan
tity of mutton, In the country, and would
tend to keep down the prices of all kinds of
meats for consumption, which the increased
pOpulation demand. 4 _
, The ballot is a powerftd enginefor good if
intelligently used, s and also a pdwerful
eh
gine for evil if ignorantly used. There is a
mint in - fite political world, and every voter
ought id think. Principles are everything
—men and mere party feelings are nothing
except as the representatives to carry out
correct principles, and none ought to be se
lect-cid to do so that belong to 'parties which
are opposed to such principles.
STATISTICS OF COMMERCE AND
NAVIGATION.
ARE INDEBTED to Mr. Yining;
V Chif of the Bureau-..0f Statlsties,• for
the following detailed abstract of out foreign
trade for titsllseal year ended Jtine 1870,_
compared With the same'. period of
. 1869,- as
shown in Monthly • RetiOtt, No: 12, now in
press. . •.::
-t c,
L. ex. port•l • Foreign:-
- (s pee I re-expor
values.)* f. ted.
- 1
Muntli ended ' I • ' ' I
June 30. 1870.1 ' :310:A14331i . CH,C6,1326 $2,00,i2"
Month ended' • ‘ I I ••.:
June 30, 18(7.1.1 • :,0,6A1371 • 27,C09,838" 2,016,.
,
12 :nos. ended , . . I . I , iiiiii
June 30, • 1i:70.j 4ta.,w,1a1, 43) zag.ck - A 1. 30,427,141
.r 2 nur.4. ended; • I . I
-.1 unt. , 3o, 19W.i , .437,314,2Ve 32%1125,613, 35,713,114
,-,-
Of the total Imports for Is7o, 311:41417,213 was dutia
ble, and $16,505,930 free of duty, '52,38,48.1,271 entered
foreenitumption, mid 51:13.374,9M entered warehouse'.
The value of commodities remaining In the ware.
houses of thitinited.thatel, June &I. 137 u, was 34,-
5:11,173, against' Ed 2,457,430, *June 30, IM3/.
lateportion of the - Imports, domestic and foreign
exports, shipped in foreign and , American v4sseis,
resp9ctively during the fiscal year ended Julie &I,
1-s7O : • - -
'Domestic
exports Foreign ex
imports. (mxe
d ports.
i values.)
Arneri&n yes.. $153.217,906..5.1AMPH,;42; $13,41r.!,211
ForeigtyYess'lll 309,13+4,1i:7 312,104,4:k .
FISCAL YEAR END
Ml=
American. 4136,802,024
Foreign,,:ttss'lsl 310,512,"231
It; will be noticed that foreign veasela carried
(nearly)l39 per cent. Of thtt imports in,1111.23, and 67 in
1776: of tile total exports, 6i per cent. In 1861), and 62
per cent. in 1870 • and of the whole, 67 per cent.-in .
169. and 61N inlB7o. -
,The values of the principal commodities imparted
during the fiscal year ended June 30, 1879 and ISOJ,
were a foll9ws:
FREE 01 , 11VTIr. ,
.
' ‘q.Artieles.'
.1 1170. 17(11,
Dyewoods in stlpkS.,a, • 1 51,337,09.3 $1,11.P24.'..)
Gold add silver coin ankbut- • .-
Don "26,368', ,0714 19,&17413711-
Guano ' ' ' • ' 1,415,19 1.4.4,318
Household and personal effects
&c . .
. •
Indigo
.•
Madder
'Hags for the manufacture, of
paper
Silk, raw, or as reeled from the
Oeoun
DUTIA)3tE
Niiiinals, IFylng ' . - $6,419,517 t 51,7,02 551
• '
Barley . 4,7741,393 . 5,7424619
.
Rice ' - ' 1,097,612_,. 1,124,234
W
heat . ,
'-. 878,1011 - 1,718.496"
Iltrks... ............. .......-- .............. ...- 1,709,1/41' 1,697,261
Out tons ' . 1,3157,613 ' , 1,619,631.
Clothing, except when of silk._ 2,573,313 1,449,448
Coal bituminous-....i.....-......._.. 1310,812 1,216,247
C0tTec..... , „ 21,123,766 24,331,743
Cotton, and manulacitures - 0f.7.. 33,380,053 20,562,874
Chemierds, drugs; soli dyes -6,717,941 ;1 7,129,098 s
Fancy goods 1,388,171 ..: 4,372,607
'
Fish 4 • -• -2,316
29'
735 ; 1,973,170
Flax, and manufactures of • 16X0,121 - 7, , •skS
Fruit • c . 7,3:37.73Z 7J154,278
Furs and skins ... .. ..
.. :..r...:...... • .. -2,261,967, 3;091,115
Glass, and inanufacturea of _ 4,157,612 . 3,895,739'
Gums, •
.. _ 1,218,491 1,210,19.1
Hemp, and manUfactures of i . ,:443,393 :1:239,039
Hides. and slcats, other than,tk
'furs 14,1422,3:0 12,483,525
'lndia rubber and gutty percha. 4,195.701 3,470,aitt
roil, and manufactures of • 32,605,327 ,
Jute, 4140., and manufacture*oL 3,155,277, 2,751,704-
'Lead, and manufactures of 3,674,9818
. 11,931,6i4
Leather and leather g00d5......... 9,817.140 7,896,001
Oils .1,874,910 2,221,211
Oplun -
Paints and painters' colors...
Paper, and manufactures of.
Precious stones
Provisions, exchutive Of di4h, th.:2 4818,506 1,992,213
Halt 1,413,958 1,268,891
Silk, and manufactures 22413,600
Soda, and salts !of ...... 3,905,218 4,193.387
riplces • 1,513,118
... 1...531,588
Sugar and molasses • , 69,KA,561 ,2,430,0411
13,871,516,•1:1
,887 750
Tea Tin,.
anol manufactures of " 9651,1910.3411:569
Tobacco, and•manufactuyes, Of_ 4,218,109., , 3,386,3941
Watches, .kc • , 3,021,875 .2,449,050
Wines, spirits, and cordials 7,587,070 • , - 6,172,491
Wood, atutmanufactUres of 9,680,955 8X42,54t1
Wool, and nianufactutes' 0f.......41-4:11,9V 40 , 2:9,196
Zinc, speller J 1,0(43,44 107,6412
•
-The vainestd the principal domestic commodities
exporled wete as follows :
Articles: ...
Agricultural implements.
Animals, living
Indian corn -
I 1111 lan cont-meal a.
Wh"eat ......
Weat deur -21,1:11,grf 1it,513,865
Coa);•bituminous and s others__ I,.Xl6Xiot
Copper, and manufactures 0t... 1,012,240 arl,ttst
Cotton, and manufactures 0f—' , '..2.11,tgr,931
. .1.6R,.10;,2f4
Drugs, chemicals and. melt!,
dries -
Dyestuffs._
barei and fur kink
PGrad and silver, and manutac- .
- tures of , -4:1,911,9r0 43,000,75.4
alops , .' . ... 2,515,734: l,ll.Plani
Iron and 'manufactures bf 5,3130,frA ' 3,z9 03:)
steel, and manufactures 0f......t.. 5,121,M2 .1152372 8
Naval stoma - - ' - . urakorki „26,100:1
Petroleum crude • • , 2,091,759 2,n06 5.T4
- •Petrelculu refined •29 1CV..,777 • 27.291,59
'
.Spermaceti 0 11 • . 3 ;114,432 .1,301.3m8
Ordnance stores • '1,2,536 161,10.1
Bacon and barns - 6,1A04:1 • ,7.Vr2,•00
Reef -' ." 1,918,758 . 44010,37.
.
. rbees4; ' 8,1*,474 • 6,43701093
lard ' • 5.1013,397 7,443,918,
Pork. ' ., 3 , 2 - 53 .1.= 3 ,422.57!"
Sew - big ruaChirka, and parts of: 2,2'01,3211 2,951,5tu
- -Spirits of tarPentlne
.-. 1;3737,31M. - ' 71,444,3 X
Tallow- • 3,814,801 . 2.382,630.
'Tobocco, leaf . -,..................: 21,100,230 .31,541/13
Tobacco, cigars, snuff, 4M,-- 1,005,971 ' 2,791,776
Wood, and manufactures of., 13,'MVP8 15,120,459
, , -
The values of the prl netpalA3fninodtt tie-expcirt
ed - • • .
' . - Articles. •••• . ' .. 1870. ISiKk* •
, ..
Gold and stiqr coin and bul
lion -..- . 411„;. 7 7l,881 .. $11,2A4/4
Breadstutrs.. -.....- 1,118.1..1it .1,124,1A1
Coffee...' -... 41003 *1,11.10.21!
.._ .—. . .—......
Oils
Srovislons
Silvr mid v oldsses
GEN. Moimc.g, hi'• conversation With a
prominent r French <Ayer,
~declated that
itt ri
:ease of • war ' between France
and Prussia, that , Freheli - Generals would
be found iuceonjpetent hi 'carry oda war hi.
EuroPe, fort reason that ;ill , who ,wets
proininent had aeliioed their laurels irrAV.
geria, where. the taetfes employed would be'
totally ineffictent hi •a European war. This'
prediction bias been fully - verified, which is.
foutidau the folli)whil. extract (rain the N. ,
Y. Tiinn.':NE: • •
From every side arises a chorus of testimony
to the incompetence and carelessness of ;the -
French officers. Frenchmen, PrUssip i ns, En
glishmen, Americans, all tell' the sarnellitory.
It is - of no use blaming Gen. de Failly in Par
ticular,"writes Dr. Russell ,'• be is only one of
many: '.'ho proceedings of - iliac/ashen himself,
aml of all;the principal commanders udder him,
had /Or some time before the last great. disaster•
beenLmarked by fatuity. Destined to be de
stroyed, they certainly went mad,bekireluind." ,
It seems that s 'Odle Iditeldabon Was imarching
froth Chslo4 to7katt I Metz, he had nolinsPicion '
than the ' Crown Trbice had turned to tallow
tim, and, niger knew that the Pnizi t ins were
-iii hisl ',
eels till he was .ally ore en. And •
during this "movetrient;rcupon the rity of,
w,hieh hung the limo O r ltherwar, the' rps.of
Qom,' lJueros halted "Over night. a t usy.,ln ,
order to give a ban* Ai. number of ea who
hid come to meet thern4t Sedan. , '
~ARE yob tkFuturrusEnWl:' not, attend
t 6 it &Able the istr ofttetober i as tbit will be
the last day On Which ittli C6ll be done. Do
:not jeopardire - tire reoeption of your; vote by .
rion-attendance to this dutY.• • The registered
flat witbe found at the place where You
: vote. Examine it;ind see thiktyour ruunels
qn havelt put on without *lei.
THE E OPEAN s..artuit TI(11ti. • i
. .
is . eompletely„invested by the
P Getman ari4ies, and every prepoMtlet
made for Its rediotion, while 4the
seem to be equally . active in iatiengthening.
.
•Ahe defences of the Capital. !While this ie
going on;tionstant efforts are acing. made to
ttnitjnotehoitilities between iGennato:
France. litte r s Fevre has Wet
but what has been proposed In - the wiry
terms of adjustment, if any Sac indeetibeetti I
submitted,' is unknown atl, the "time a,
- writing 'this article. If they can agree.
upon terms subject to the ratification of. the
Constituent Assembly Nirliliafli — alkitit to
-
-;be elected, with the miderstandiog that the
Germans are to hold- theiw present con;
quests until such a settlenienf, Is as binding.
as any that mould be made Odder morela
vorable • firctimstauces. people of
Prance alone can-settle this mutter with
Prussia, with the Assembly tn be elected in
October as Its spokesman., lhis is • really
the first dawn of light in the !'shape of nes.3l
- peace which we haw seen, for it LI the
first advance in the way of 4kiiig for terms
which has been made. by tl* present Gov.
Crimea of France. Bismarck has said that •
Prussia wishes to stop the cattage, but. , she
must have notable government with which
to treat and gnarantees foil the future for
:the 'preservation of peace, )4er own lode-.
pendence, and rehnbursemett tor the ea- .
petises of a :war into which She was forced.
by ..the ambition of l ,Naix4n III.; all of
which is reasonable rind mu t t" be approved,
by other notions. We .belieye that the de
sire of Germany is peace upoit •reliableguar
antees, and to-day In
,this country she has
the sympathy of the people just as strongly
as ever, and-will retain it,.prtovided that her .
Government wages no war ligairet the es
tablishment of the Reptiblicitn France with
Which our people also sympathize.
The calla° of Itepabficani9n in Europe is
-deeply indebted to Prussia foiithe remarkable
progress it has made durli4 the past two
months. Attacked by IrnpOial despotism,
she has overthrown .i`4lpoittn, upon the
ruins of whose throne,' thti Republic has
arisen' la France, and the pritielples of which
- will eventually be . extendo to England,
Spain, Italy and Gerinany,lthe latter coun
try noW preparing fut. united coated
emtion, which may take the shape of the
"United States of Uercriany.P
,030,000
ED JUNE
MEI
Domestic' • ,
expo rt Foreign ex
(m 1 Y e d ports.
values.)_
$1.37,32,620 815.321,701
! 276,1'3070 ti,551,710
1.127,6K1 flri3,llo
1;=1,604 ' , 1,1110,550
1,1118,11:i 3,553,258
:3,121 . ,34 I 2,800,610
3,017,954 3,31R,496
1:77151001.. ' 1.1)16,572
1.078,558 1,270,482
. 1.699,783 1,001,777
,t, 1,797,2,1 , 5 " 041 Eel
1870.
siAB,Q92 0,4a7,531)
1,111.1,619 917,046
1;317,575_ 6,81,7111
IMAM 1,616,273
4 74 /2,84 ' 1.51.1.
....... 1,356,773
/002.6:14
1;941,139 , • 2.,(39,741
i~:~c,x~.r
1,4.19,1%. - • 30 2,1 14 2
1/191,9V7 51.114
1,21g,00 I.ne7,ce
SEEM
NEI
THE MINERS' , JOURN
For the wonderful progrt.4 of the last eight
weeks, we are indebted to. t4e antis of Ger
manly, and while we hail each Republic
which appears on.the map - (if Europe; let Os
not forget that for' these wottderful, gratify
ing events- We are • indebted to the German
nation. .
. z. •
. .
OIIR NATIONAL FINANCES.
.
c... , ! OnE of - the so-called Dein °crane papers
!J circulating in sections fvlfere they sup-.
pose the people are ignoranT, state that the
National Debt has not beeniredueed any uu-.
der. the Republican - Admittration of Gen.
Grant. To meet these audacious falsehoods,
the Assistant Secretary of t the Treasury, now
acting for Secretary Bout4ll, has prepared
the : following official stat4nent from the .
books of the Treasury Deietrtment, whiel ..
shows that, the revenue }lasi! beeirlargely iii= .
creased from the same sOuri•cs by an. honest
collection of the same; and that the National
Debt has been decreased from March 1, 1869,
to Sept:l,TM, a period ofllB 'Months, over
. . i;. 168,158,64;1i 94 . A .
Jr
iW
which ii 6. arils . 9
of Z4,.34 . 4 4 , :0w per : minith,
during th* r wholi.? period. : Mere is the 0111- ,
cial statement : , i i , . .
Comparative elYntement t :leer( eghe and ,F..." -
penclitteres ft( tier Unileil &Wei Government for the
eightern months from Sept. .ilsrch 1,141 J,
.vend the eighteen months from Mrtech 1, fiM , to.Rjd.;
1, IS7O.
Y. F:(' KI PT'S.
.ild io §t,et 1, sls moottoi
finn4 Sept.' front Mar.
fiburces of revenue. I. lila:. to 1. IgLia, to
snide 1, - -1 0 1. e pl. 1;
1$;'0.
;-
1,11711„7 M 19 $Z11;12.5,139 21
' 3,4111,379 5.310,894 78'
249,1:41,515 74: 2119,3g7.761
51,7e1,270 51 , 4.1.091,109 74
-",r5.1.54721111 I.r2i 911,5;.4C0ni
554,215,L1M (.2
Cuxtrn. -
Internal revenue
311seellnnenus
•
Inertneeuf revenue
Ow what account
Oongress
Expenses of Post oltic,
Department
Expenses of foreign in-'
tercourse 1,5•11,5tK?
Executive. ; *23;4. 4 ,7= lt:,Oli,091
Expenses of pub lic Ivo i Id- P: - •
lugs • '2,11},g13 1,:;29:in5 frp:
-Expenses collecting rev- ,
enne customs 14,341,7iki
Miscellaneous• expenses
of customs, incimilimi
buildings - 10,910X1 St 12,14.1,1:12. 3;
Expenses ofcollectingiu y ; • •
ternal revenue ' 11,717X;11 it)
Miscellaneous expenses, .
internal, revenue 3,1•2,73 S -17 2,752,*-11 is
ExpensesofUnitedStates
courts
Expenses Interior, De
.. partMent
Expenses of War Depart
ment__ .
Expenses of 'Navy De
partment...... . ... . . .....
Expenses of Indian lie
. partmene .
F.,xpenses of Pension De.
Tartment
Deervau;e of expend!, nr,T.K;
; .
By the foregoing statiarients ilt, will 1w seen that
the amount gained by inereasOi of receipts and'de•
crease of expenditures has bee, as fajlows: _
From Increase of reeelpts..,.., • P7;213,7)65 Sii
From decrease of expenditilre • 52,553,060 77
• • ;6 .."-
lIEDreTION IN 17CrEI:OT ACCOUNT.-
SMII
. . .
The aMoitutof Interest paid frimi sep- '
tember 1 , 181 U, to March 1, ISQS wus._ ..$•41P,:1.•!1,,7141 0 . ?;
The amount of Interest paid frolic -Murrill.
.1, , .1810, to .'iepbauber 1, IS7O, wfiN 151 r 21,121,5 anti -- • 4.
Sthowing•ft net decrease on In+nit 114 ,
count (IL. ......
. • . ,
- • 11.F.DUCTION or 11: HiLIC
‘ l.) kali.
• a
The reduction of the public dgbt from
Seplendwri, I,Sd7 to,,slarclll,ls4o, was .1.0.,2in;1110 V 7
The reduction of public ON' It‘un , '
idareltl,lBl,ll. toßeptember. 1, #B7o', was 40,512,1011 10
Showing an increase In the reiliKtion.of •
the public debt...of • i - - fife,
•
During the eighteen months trem .I.la.relt 1, bittit, to
September 1,1870; the atnounb of redaction in • the
public debt has been, I/8 above lithown. Slth),4l:l,ltS
most of Vhich has been in theturclutse and cancel
lation of bonds bearing • intertlt in coin, and In the
payment of obtigatbans overdo f• and eanvertible
to interest-bearing bonds or certificates. • " •
The amount of Interest wittyli. *IS hereafter' be
saved to the• Government on tfo dad actually paid,
Is about $8,745/46 Os annually, tfr, V 23,79 9 .67 monthly,
mostly In gold. . • -
There has also been a constOnt; iniprOvfment in
the decrease of the debt during:thettix months since
March Ist or this yearl,over tlie corresponding six
mouths of biatt, to tile followin • extent:
•
in , 1 "I?a). 1..4 icu.
i____
51arch`......... ..... ..... i $266,704 .T,A,706,319 i1!ii,1,47),41 1 10
April 1 6,*l9,iirro 65i Wel1,7(01 iEll, 5,`-%.122; 74
My ' 113,:054,7:7 91"1 2 p1,962 a - 917304, , CU
June T , 16,410,in 541" i,7;:i in 2.703,t,19:50
July - - • 7.4:15,744 Z,l 054,123 74 14,50‘i:C0! 45
Augu5t.........._,
i J___
',.,irotar+4 .
. And the decreaKeof the debt i hcpast Ala months,
.
as compared with the twere v•ri
follows: ( "ding frionths, Ls ali
Decrease of public debt . Vlr.t . i.'. twelve:. • ..
• , months preceding March i, I 0 esa,lali.M. -,54
For the six Irtotaths since that:t ate . 82,11,77aUt 7i;
The foregoliag isli correct COT
.. pirlson at the linen
!
dal operations of I lie tiosernisient. daring the port
ed. named; made Train The official records 01 -this
Depart:Meat. - - t •
W.m 41 » ... • , •- ,
• . . . RlMasteroscs. -
.•, - . 1 -Acting Secretary; '
Tatusgin• Dar.itarstE:sT. Eic tembair 5,16:0.
At the last mission . 4 . •.)t 'ongress taxation .
was deereasett.about ;43. ;000 for the en
suing year,,and certainly ~ ith such extraor,-
nfuaxyulks, it.would pe very, unwise to
risk the -fintkiiig of 'fini'..rhauge by Which
the :Demoerats •Shoubt• ii§rain• power, who
invariably . incense in ad ,• of dituinish
tzWttioti And public debts,!:becau.* 014 e •
Peet to ilve , upoti public prundlir.
(4".'
'l,Titt: Monthly report N it!, of tAie Bureau
of Staticties, now nearly Brady, for• distribti
tion, contains; among otlOr valuable statis
tics, several interesting ifible, • shOWllig the
number, age, sex, occupttlion, and nati-vity
of the immigrants, :, ttigetiler Nt:ith (he (ports
at which they arrived, king . the"qUitter.
endt4l_ June 30„ 1870. l:so contains' the
following SYnoPticat tab 9, Wiliell: ..sbi.bits
the total number of)m granbi arrived in
the United. States thitliig icl
fiscal year Chil-•
ed June 30; 1870, intl. thei `.: nationalities : . .
MEMO
leetand.Oreitaritalti,..,...— .:.i , ....4.1.7..
Getman isuttes...... • . ..*. a
natark ......t.....:.-- '• - 14.1
'I rldn.ian..n..a..r t — O " ard it. " --.. ' .7 7 :: . , 1
Oh countries cf,tr?pe,...;
ti1h45....;.—;......
.All -
. 13rItish N. A. TasseirOgut..
Macho- '
Month
wait ...... .
EIiSMEM
Total...
IC
N
g
Incallib
little e
iftriPl
right t
h a l e
inst
an to
cr oder
T 1 e te
is ti hu ,
lations
Chure
Fltem
re fie of I
r mill .
o 1 m
87,213,765 GO
MEM
IS nt(nl Its m out tt s
from Mar.
P.,69. to
Sept.
Is7o.
front Sept.
ur to
eli
1N41,7
2 3;;4ki,4G7
F.
7.141,1p7 21 ~ G15,1*.;; 11
2,516;ty, 40 . st
3,610,51.1 3 11 1,762,451 01
19:1,5;14,14.1 19 . st
:)6.740,54 I 07 . /11 .20.1,1315 '7ll
8,71,00 at 7;215,6;0 IA
37,1ir2,7',3!! 574 .1;,S14,191;
1.411 . , '215,912,62J . 12
Ss2,K - .3,4160
+ ' 1 .NArxil lii
k ,
, 4,16f4,1r414 03
IGaln tilde-.
cresols.:
4(4',:t.N 7t)
EME
MEMM
12=113
Total
. - , 1 • •
H 1 411 M 1 11 4.0 3 3
31.41 - - ...15e2: . 64,119 d
73,0271 100.111 49 NS:
moor io,sso': Z 1,311
2,319; ' 1,34111, 4.0g1
SO, - - 4CIC- 4066
US: i ; 241 - 1.002
:-.2.015 .-1,07' 085
"44110„,;..1•,3111! 4 4 003
ZS'. .., !;r94.i ' ; 011
i1.41:13- , .. ;al Von
i.?'• • .. 4 ,4i
t; ~ .1
4.63_4; '1.1.13i . - 13;40
. r 33i ••'.- 5l
. 1 ' 3l
Pi Z7 V - 't7.lllMl 40,40$
lv-- .7 3521 /01A :1 452
10 , •1.
17i19
,416 ~..= 43 1
, ;3LS ' 'O3 413
• .1117 ; 1,442
.L 3 400 ; -AT ; •I'M
---...... .1.....4...
R1x.:54 - u4.416 w,on.
;L.--POTTSVILLE, SCHUYLKILL COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA.
°MUTATION OF ROME.
I tite remarkable events of the week
....e utmost Unresisted 'occupation of .
' • iOlty by.theltallan troops. In .
1 of Other occurrences in Europe of
. : • tulle, It is not so startling; but
to *ill be as important to civiliza
. to'..the progress of civil and rellgt-.
,- i
, • :,. on the continemt•of Europe' as
wilt transpire from thiContest now
• ...,i France. Scarcely fiveweeks
tt
. -• Isiare an Ecclesiastical
of
e promulgated the d ogma of Papal
lit ;is, divine prerogetive, ' and so
iectlinitt had that to-day . he stands
°fins temporal power,. and of the
..f :iminate and - enforce-anathema
lte.Amtentate who have.owedallegi
in4 This has passed away. How
• ul the change in so 'short .a tinie.—z
dency of the age is not only ,t() abol
ansiavry, but also to sever, the .'re
.w*ielt have existed between the
aria the State, and to destroy that
oft".hierarchical slavery, which is a'
the ; 4ark ages. The mere discussion
rt crlttie dogma of Jufillibility,
.cre
hch- dissent in the Church Of which
e is; the Spiptual head, - while its pro-,
on has created schisms and 'dissatis-•
whi At will-increase, affecting the co
strength- of the Church untie?
rille:.l 'Austria has already but, lock-e in
measure from the bonds which bound
It , e,
,while..; iiung,ary threatens
w• th example ond ftlablish her re
laid peudenCe. , Some think that the
'on 1 f the temporal front thespiritnal
tidn of the Pope will strengthen the
d• e _
yatholic Church ' in , Europe. We
rlbtll It is too late. The proniulga
tiu dogma of Infallibility r • ted s
c Ea
so
i
the Ptn
-mulgat
firtion
hiNive
Mimi.
1 t
a i grea
bier to
tifolio
1 gious
pant
tl .
°ann.
OMIlt
ink
t ou o
ueh ,1
e 1 1 . 1
ith 1
the un,
issension, that even before the fall of
temporal power, which carried
coasiderable Weight and influence,.
ty of the Church. could not be main.
liw Much more Will it beimpalred
at the Pope is shorn of pdwer eft-:
is kingly decrees.. Another import
that the hierarehleil shivery has
aiatained to a4freat extent by en !
rig 4opular ignorance and :diseoura
‘dueational movements. With en
fit4dorn will
.come educathinalspro
;
iu its train religious ' freedom.
1 o trammels of, slavery which have
D ore bound t he ma s ses Wpi be ca4t 'off.
ote the r a pta, progress of events with
Ir, but - see in it the • hand' of an over-
Providence, shape's our ends
'ieW them as we-may.
1 •
J.. JORN B. PACKER WIN tiolliillateA on
irs lay Ut . Stutbury as the Itepuldiean calm
de for 'Co of the. Nth-Congressional
isII , cOmposed of • thell , counties Of Ban-
Northumberland, Juniata. Union and
faired
pow t
6 orce
t po
SIM
aura.
ng
arges
_ Po s,
kll t
leret.
We
von&
iliny
oute
Ho
hur
idat
istm
I• • _
Recui ilicitterg - ,
1 '
1
WEEKLY ALMANA.
10' '
4
. st:q 1 sux , .. : • .-.,
1 rusty , hETS • 31?"
f'hi
4U.
"Mo
27 Ti;
IN WE
rif
30 FM..
! 519 .5 51 ;D. 11.
uw Y. 5 5/ 5 51
,• ru v 551 5.i2 Firrst - .'44 2, 92 MO
jinAT A 2 rr 5 , 1 1:911 M.,. 9 5 411 v.
L.,,,.D . ky ~!: I,t,;st Q 1 17 ::1
9.914 Y— i. 54 46; '25 ISlitut;
~wYt. 5 sf, 5 11
morrow.—Thirirninth Sunday bf
land ji ticteenth 411.6 r Trinity.. Day's tvngth
rs-and 3;minutes.
To
vrar,
P 2 ho
Co4nty Institute Mt ill he held this ye:ir
emmilencing :siovetn.lwr
d s intere-iting progranitne 'is being p.n.-
The
in A
full at
parea
1. Herbert, aiinounee.4 van
'Justic:e of the Peace in- I.IA 'North
,la, subject to decision of the publi-
Convention.on. -
!Joh'
for
Va l
L aril'
Mr.
didat ,
West
can 1
gyrnen, of late, are hetiming with
n inerea:e of application:" for rnltri
inors mug have vulg . :Thing. to do witii,H
y appearance.
Ou
mil
moni
their
h
Imp
Post, No. 23, 13. A: It., of, the+ Ilor
resolved to attend the dedication of
aers Monument in Tainaqua, en
,the nr th day of October.
Go
ough
OEM
' We Inv to attention to tho advertisement .of
'Unio Seminary, New Berlin, appearing — in
anoth e,olimin of to-day's :paper. The nee;
term villleommenee on the I9th ofketoher.
nything_ mere,'",heatitiful in the tine of
y, than the now changing and variegated
on our mountain ;Miles, can anywhere
nisi,. we woul4l tq know what and
,
it
scene
folin
Lo fo
I
.heran Serilces.- -Rev. Mr. Needy v: ill
With° English Lutheran Uhurt.,ll,.3lnrk.. , t
c,,t0 , -trorrow tuornihg, at Io.l.Teloeti, at,o
'ng o'clock. The public aro cordirr
•
10 - attend. .
Lu.l
priac i
.. 3(1114
el.ot
invit
2fipt Presbyterian Church being elos4si
largentent, thc,congaegatiOn ia now wor
.g 14 the Court House. Services to-wor-.
y the Pa.stor, Rev. Dr. Smiley,.'ai M..
I'.' M. • 411 are
Th'
for e
'shia
row
nod
er ExPloat
tngj about 8 ve on at,
loc a k, C t o l i r lier o e , :. t"ie.titr4l:-v
1
4;t* .
op he
nf,i ot
ei te
ig t ilie Oliver'sOlit?er'
er was thrown a
;able:distance f n r a i;i b n ° t i l
spot.
pot"
'rsuii .was:injured, OM te ly
I
Bo 1
mon
bois
11111 1
fide
hop
•
- • i
.
I Lo=t.—Under this hadlng in anotbet : "Culu inn
!will • tlinnd an advertisement announcitig.the
',foss .f a seal , Ring. The loser valties .the ring
;ter 1 / 4 1iigbly on account of ic.spciations, connec
led ttiereivith, and the Girder will ecilifer a.favor
pever to..be forgotten by leaving.the stunt. at
IhisJoiliee.
Tlfrouirli the courterty . of Superintendent l'at
mentoii, assisted by Fleveri t 1 of the teachers. an
1
excellent - view in the planet Saturn With his
'rings his been- had tor, sevt...ral eVeningss paw;
with the teliZseopiibelonging,lo.the Public
Schools.' Besides-1.110 ptpils, w ho,w &re espeei:
ally invited, a nuiuher of our ettrien ,4
joyed the sight.
Found: Dead by a Roadside.—M Thursday
morning' i John Beduin, lately a pauper:in the
'Alms lionise, was 'blind dead near the road •
!leading from Coal Castle to ifeekseherville. An
[inquent.wam helot by Deputy Coroner Neugardt, ,
;and a post mortem examination by :Ihr.
;of Mlneieville. A verdict was :rentlered„ that'
death web eauSod" by congestion vt the brain, in
duced bs4 intemperance and exposure. The de.
iceased ,had no friends nor telatives lieee, and
was buried yvderday, in the Catholic Centetern:
Minersville:
Dacafjtation on a Railroad
W
'edne. ar afternoon last, about two o'clock,
a wohian named Sally J,nn shoemaker. sat
.down Ott the track of the Little Schnyikil Deli
road:nett LonTaere's;and oh the•approach of the
lecointAkt",e laid her bead oft the' rail, and was
inn o't{et.;' her head was eat Was clean as if a
knkfe , hail been used. It 91',a14 - .li. ease of suicide
domestic diffieulties., She «B.v a
tet or Johnattran Shoemaker, a farmer of
l'Otruship, and lived with her brother
the same township.
uaus
'daugh
Joir h
. .
airdeall letters remniiiiniirkihe
'Sept. 23, 11370. • •
trt;o H Ku!! Mutldai, Itleitetts
Park Koler Eliza tt .Itoorback %V rt
eiga Long 1.) • . Rodgers
,It E M Miller AH j. Stutz Fretrit
H L Hanky - Sohn, . Swift (,o y
John ' 31celift John = 8(4111 H
.onathan Mangan no Smith Mrs It It
pJtt'Loulsa. NAttennatil - Amnastunley Em mo
• "mi n a . Otta"Miebael„ Smith Carotin •
rA Punrilaket (MAY. Toms Winton'
gaggle Quinn Charit'st 'Wood Chas r •
ILClsfgAng}igt Whitctnan l)
chi • linage Chas JJ,I • Wigs Jolio • -
! o ',:th Win itaiiyj. • Wagner %Vol
M bias [tank John Ziegler G
One
Post
Burnet
Brode
Boyer
camp
Chain
Donne.
Da%ll.
Davi
Donou.7
E rams
Fulton!
Clay . 3
Heckl.l
Min • • •
Ktiber
• . . ,
r4itlienkof thls county' drive about as
i.u.cles as.= bo found anywhere, anti it
Cilitabte fact.tbat most of them ire mann
eer midst. Yesterday Arc examin
o-lreated phaeton built by Messrs. Scliab-
C s , Coal street, for Mr. Ctearge;tiorther,
se ville. ' The Tri'odel ,is.clegant r and the
very_ title The vehicle is light
•
The
ne.at
is a er
facto •
'ed'a •
jein
of Mi .
work
vet strottg, and is , adapted for onaor two hors—
thi,
- It is built with platform running . gearing, and
painte i a , carmine , relieved bin delicate strip
ed gol leaf. The .trlmuaings aro of blue cloth
of the tinit,workartanship. Tite...entire appear
ance o the phaeton 183-Cry neat and attractive,
esti fleets the.gresitest I credit .upon the niatui
facturer* \ .' . - • • .-• . ‘
_!-
I •
. French's Oriental- arena and., Egyptian pa
raertM.--Thie anions tiatabinafir will short ie visit thia Borough . , f'. From' what, we have' heard
of it, we can readily believe that to of mmizelbis c .
vast and! . veld 'cotribination of ithausement.N
neatly eVery quartet of the globe had. been ma
- pelted te , contribute. - its rarest reprosentatives.
The camels end their Arab-attendants from the
, scorching' sends of- Sahara; the. monster ele
phant.' m 4sia,end pie 'lAlliptit from Africa;
the ifieent 'lions from theVape of GoOd
Hope Pa is front Egypt and , tine patrl-.
ele
phant' m
Apes froth Abylatints; sire some of the. 1
featu iin this Circus - exhihitioni surd which I
are f ndl. In no other In the Union:, - \VI do not
doubt, on the 'occasiottof itavisit here that
the %mat i tent will be crowded to- 'witness the
variel eatertalament,for In Waage It hia popu
lar en oyment to,witness the results of the cut
titati a or . the physical 'man'; his leconiplish
mini, rests of strength and agility; his Skill,
In bri g the brute creation, whether r.eitre
amn tbe helve, the elephant or the fieroest
A l
0 01 0 . eking iff . beitats,—nnder the perfect
control 0-the human mind..._
Lecal.lottiftga-Ileinandtherttsbout the strOt 1
corners and around thedOors ufplictesofamule
ment you *ill See a lot of urchins, sotne. - af .
them decently' clad and presentini-11 ree r
table appearance, whh are engaged in ease
their manhood by pitfiing #wsy at eXecraidS
-
gars. -It is fair to presume that their mammas"
are not aware of the ifoul . habits their &ding
boys pick up and practice outside of this - pantet ,
al roof ; but for their;benefit they should - know
that it is stated that a French - physideliai ties irt
-vostigated the effects 'of smoking on thirty-eight.
boys, between the ages of nine and fifteen, :who
were adAticied to the, b it. Twenty-seven pre
sentedlfistinct sympt ma of nicotine ism,
In twenty-two there ere serious ; of
the circulation and digestiott, nod d ing
feet, and a marked tip - Petite for
In three there was affection; in eight, deidded,
deterioration of the blood • in twelve, therewse
,' apitesis ; ten had disturbed 'deep ; and four had
1 ulceration of .the mucous Memrane of the
mouth. It is-easy - then to see how the ranks of
drunkards and dissolute men "about toWn"are
recruited, when there are so many boys in
training for delirium tremens and all the hor- •
core of dissipation. I ,
4 1)n Tuesday afternoon a colcired boy, named
William Reillyi• aged about twelve. years,
went to the store-of Messrs. Evert& Soil, id
Market,' above ('Fifth: street, and asked for
butter. Upon - being informed that they. did
not keep butter for site; the boy went out, but
soon returned and asked for.. a 7quarrof corn,
The clerk proceedeel - Tto Abe back part Of the
store for the corn, and-while - his back was turn
esEthe lad opened the money'.drawer andro
lieved it of its cements, in the money line, uO,
ol,served by the clerk. lib look his corn and ,
belt the store.. A-few moments latet the money
was missed, and Chief of Police Smith being
informed of the occurrence immediately set out
in search of the lad Whitt had gone to the ,circus. Tho boy had purchased his ticket for the show.
but upon tbe approach of tit r e officerle showed
his heels in a race down the hill.. Ile was not.
fast enough to' make his: escape; howeNer, the
officer soon overhauling him.- Upon examina
tion eleven dollars of t to money was recovered
and the boy taken to the lock-up, from which
... place he was subsequently released on recom
mendation of Mr. Evert, who seemed well satis
fied in getting-the money back. , , . ,
Thomas Given was 'the. name given by.
' a lad of aboot ten years of age, 'on Tuesday
afternoon, w o entered the tohaeco store of .
Willism ti...ire. ng and robbed - the till of sevenil.
,
dollars worth of currency. Mr. Gresang,,it ape;
pears bad - slapped around the corner to got a: ,
paper and as ho was returning met-the isa coin-
Mg out orthe door, and. when :staked what he
wanted, Iminedietely took, to[Bitt heels down
Union street. Mr: G. hollowed and ituteld
in catching him-below the depot , -tha hOy. iiMp: ,
_ping against- the fence and heaving the money,
which be still had lin his lierftWitiroughtthe pal
ings.- lie re:cos-credit:to mhtov and brought
'the lad back' to - 1 the store, where he gave his
uametts above, and said ttr t , his father r •and
mother lived • in ,;St.' ,Clair. .. When asked his
i
reason-for mmmitting'the theft, he replied that
.he wanted to go top the circus. lie was turned
overt to officer Ewing to be disposed of. • ' -
.1. A. .Selley 'Census Marshal of snh-flivi
•sion No. 3-20, has .furnished us with the
following figure-Os the - restilt of the late (ten
.stis of the places nentioneal: , •
midtneport B o rough A .. - e -
New Philadelphia ttoroagtt - . --..._...„ Sas
Blythe
schuyitatt,..Nortti..l _........
fair
.
sehuytkill, s•mtil l • - ,
. .
. comparing-these egurts with the census of
isgfi, in the same area of territory, we tintla de
crease of 1:265. This may :be is:counted for in
iliC fact that in Is4o mining operation 4 l , in. the
Valley were lit full blast; whereas, at the time
of 'taking the eentais this year; we find many
the old collieries abandoned and 'the men lore
s.nl7lt emphiytrient in other parts of the,
county. The stiSpension, toff, has been the
cause of many men leaving , and seeking ent ,
ployment in other parts of theJtegion..,_ . ,
John• B.• AVariesher, Treasurer, ' acknowl
edges the receipt of the following_ rims for
the relief of the families - of. the men, killed
I,e the late disasferat the colliery. of Messrs,
. !line._ Glassinire: .'
Robertson, Gititernian 'tt. Co.'s Henry. Clay
Colliery, Shamokin, tt,Zsl'. , ',:.• . , '
GtiTterman & Gorman's t,reenbaek , Colliery:,
shainokin, W, :to.
. Mr.-Charles Weeltjen, Pottsville, file.
' Further . 'contributions' are - respectfully. so
licited. ' . . . -
On Tnls•lay morning a horse belonging
to M. Seligman', drawing. a 'load, of . feed,.
was bents driven-down [Railroad st., • and the'
driver' seeing , a Iheoirietive 'coming up the
railroad turned . up Church Alley to avoid
enacting it, and `as lie did so the animal took
frizlit, started to. run, and When sheet half way
up to• Centre Street, fell and broke one.of the
shafts. Aside frdm the 'shaft and two or three
,iight l•raises to the horse, no damage was done.
on .Monday, while engaged at work. on the
tf, , w German Catholic Church in Maltantortgo
street, William Porsel, of Mt. Carbon, fell from
a ladder to the ground, and broke tine of his legs.
Dr. Bland attentledthe injured man, and at lust
accounts he war tidin . g well._ •' •
Mrs. E W
Edwards, of adesville, receiCed seri,-
ous• injuries on Tuesday afternoon,' by being
thrown tram it carriage while turning a corner
in Italir.,ad street. Site was conveyed to her
house and medieal ;lid stinthioned. ------ --',
An` examination ?if , candidates for-, Mine
Inspectors toek . pi:l;e on the nth and %Nth
it.t., in Pottsville. There were ficteen appli
cantf, of which number the dime' gentlee l len
hereinafter , mentioned were the stietless'ful o es,
and reemninerided for appointment t,,--',-, ~ •
• First District—Frank Suteltzer, of G irarelville.
The district embraces all collieries , south' of
Broad :ilotilitaii.o between, West - Brooch and
- the fast lino of the Vomits-, including' New Dos
:,-,n Collieries. ..: • , '
Second Dlstriet-LJobn Eltritightink Ashland.
, The ',district embraecs all - collieries north of
Broad Mountain; in Schuylkill Comity ; with
eollieries in Columbia ennui y. .
Thitd -- Dist eta—David . it. Edmunds, New •
Philadelphia. The disttict - embraces• alr.col
lieries in Northumberland.and Dauphin Coon
ticsovith the-collieries in Schuylkill :County
west ot•the V=est Breech.
The horse..stid.buggy stolen 'from A. J. Stroh,
of Sit it bury, on the 12 inst., an account of Which
was _icon in these eoltunns on Friday,' was re- - t
~.ovcred by the owner 'on - Friday a ft er' a four
days" chase. The two thieve. 4 drove to Lehigh,
twit where they ltad sold the. whole , rig for
•eveiAy-tive doilarA to a • gentleman named
Battled Eastman. .The price being - so low, sus-
F .;,•ion was i.reateil and the men were arrested,
itit there benls n..) evitleneellp/11 which Id' hold
them, Mr. s7trolt not li:ti.ving arrivitel,dhey were'
permitted to go their way in peace. A. reward
,:f tilly dollar, i, , i , offered for their apprehen-..i
„..voi. - . • , . . • _.,
• . , ••
Michael M.t, f Ara, 11.4.41.-, . a red seventy-two
years, au old, resident of New 'Castle, •took
tea at ; the house of 'Joseph Brady- out Fri- .
,flay - eyeiiing and "got - a piece or meat lodged
in his throat ,in such a way that it, was Im
possible to remove, it before life 'had become
exdnet, DepittV C.mioner Neugardt field a.n in -,
-, titeston the body on Saturday and a i;erdiet of sc.;
cidental death was rendered. Mr.'Madara was
well-known , throughout the county and wn..§
..bigbly respected by all who knew him.
Mr. .1.• :11i1ekey for a long.. time in the
Hotel busitieSs on the pike near -Schuylkill
[haven, died at his residence, in Orwigsburg on
Thursliy. Ills remains were interredat - Schuyi-.
kill ilaVen yesterdity. Mackby's,was a favorite
reseet for sleighing parties, and tfie - genialdnist
eiii,ied a wide reputation. '
• the. Pennsylvania Methodist' State , Conven
tion, which will be held in Philadelphia; 'com
mencing • Tuesday, October 13, will embraeti
deleettimis of representative anon from the
ministry and, laity of the entire Coinnionwealth
and will attract a large number of visitors (rota
„ they Sh4s. .-.- • - ,
of on Saturday last„ a young man named James
Irvin, employed at' the colliery of - Jam-fence
& :klerkle, had his arm broken, and was other..
\Vi.,.? serimislv injured, by ii fall of coal.
. A son of Mr. Ilenry,,,ofTanua, had his
neck broken by .coal falling .him, while
engaged in gathering coal 'Saturday morning,
from the effects of which he his wince died. . •
The Adjutant General's Department on Wed
-nekilay shipped tiftysLeatnan muskets and ae
,autretnents to Capt. Henry Culbert, of -the
Jefferson Rifles,' !North ,Pinegretve, Schuylkill
County. - ' ,- . .
the Two Per Cent.; tax' on the gres.4 reeeilds
of phases of atinisement will erase on and after
the first of tikoher, Pottsville will scarcely
notice the reduction:- . • .
....
The State lair and a large, number of county
niirs are announced-for next•week. Schuylkill
is'among the latter class. , ,
The New breaker of Messrs. Bill sit, , ,llarris,
at 3lahanty City, 'is being pushed forward to
coMpletion with remarkablezeal. • .
Col. William lasissig, Surveyor-General of
colo"rado, was in Pottsville this week. ,• • 1
_ Benjamin Baywoctd, Es 4. ~ left at • our. 1
!;ihce on Wednesday evening last, a small
Ithuielt canitaininif:. three - .peaches,' the !ergs
est ineasuring4.incliesi in circumference. They
were grown_in the-vard attached to his office at
tin corner of S - evozal and Market streets: - They
will compare favorably. With anv that grow in
Delaware or New", Jersey. • It prves that peach
es can be grown suceessfully in this County.
Mr. Frank tilassmire, who' resided for sevs
eral years- in this llerough, and learned his
trade with ' the late .Mri - - 1 1.1. W. MeGinnesi,
was nitirderedin:gonophiS, Tenn., on the 11th
instant, in a - gottierrhin anyetericlos manner, the
perpetrator ofthe,act being„ . unknown„ He was
• a widower and 515 years - , of age. "The, act Wei
perpetrated at Wight, .he being' struck . on" the
head with a misidle.' - . „..., .
. .. .. . .
A brother of II lassin i re, po resnles here,
left on \retitle ay afternoon to Memphis, to in
veisti,.!•ate the case and g , eenre the arrest of the
miirderecif' pOssibler ,The impression is that
the irldi,, , lve .Was robbery, as BM-deceased was
. , worth' Leveral "thon..4iiii thillars... '!: • ' • "
. . The foliowing . ..importiltit re Venue deciskin.
in reg.itct to fail Malt. tames was given on'
TueSilay lwit; ins the :: , ',Uniteid . States Circuit
.Court 12.-.'.'"J ielgp . , - .Strod,.l; In. Abe% Owe of the
l'hiladelphia , •atiti, Head irtg. , ..itailmeall Minis.
'"11 - 3- Vs.";:ltarites eolleetcie of. - the Internal Rev-•
•elineTax . .,.; ": . Judge StrOng 'read an elaborate.
•opinioti; deciding ,that Milliclaw stood before
the pa.sitage - nt , the act of. the• Bili of July, 1)00,
the dividends and interests Paid' by- . railrfad
companies on and:after January 1, Itilli e were
not liable.,•te an. internal • 'revenue tax,rand that
theact'orJnly 14,1870, could - not beaceepted.as:
a legislative-expesitioripf the meaning of .the
former law, so' far as lialiplied, tothe, pretient
i
•• se.
~,,—. -. ` - . 1:- I • -• •,;' ••
The 'treasury:Department hai since instruct-.
e I United States; District Attorney iitilitb, 'of
hiladelphia, to appeal 'all-the - edsoti involved in
o recent decision ofJudge . Strong - to, the' Su
p enie Court. -If theddeision• is - sustained by a
ft il bench of.the Supreme Court, thwt,'.biaes;
a roady'colletted, aniounting"let about six milv.
li n do' ris, will he open to reclamation. - • . ...'i
• thaw en, , four driti-'tive -O'clock ;en'. Mon
-41 eve ing iasf,spii, s oetitig tarty natur.sd
at priest' tavern, on. 11 bad. Mountain, Porter
toi-nship, abOnt fife 11;..5. from Tremont, in
A :
• which a young Irialinie wed - Jetties llane, ,
- Nvat shotiwiter bY swirl...Amen' named. Michael
Punted, he isfrticuiiiiajorWhieh are refateds.to.
us as foil wsrt , . .";. - .; 4 "1... I -\„--:' •
' phi-in the earlier par. ,Of 3fonday; 4 , pitrty or]
miners, nd another party of men engaged at
i t
n - o k oti the eitetision of"-, the beiberry Rall":- j
A - bil , , eni Cloyed liSr - 3fen is. - MeGrint it Ft- .
ric cotitractortf, - all of Whom hitt been tiff
on ' turday previous,. met at - WlesPsi Vern,
where they min led tegethcidnring the • day,
.drinkin.t at d - enjoying'g, themseiveings best they
cottlii. - , , tlu ng • the afternoon, -• Vi got Cato.
di Ili cullY'w th two or ttit*) of the:miner; when
bard' wordS were ..c4chinfrid . and=a apt rip
peered imictinerit.-I."Aelhii juucitire Canea
friends ,reinonstrated with; him against raising
a fight, and 'prevailed Upon - him' toleave the
bonen and - let the mi n er drop._ Kane ' left ttet•
house with his 'friends, and lad not proceeded
fai down the road helno Porte as a friend of
thnparttel with Whom Nine - ha* hid the Itlier.e
cation, cants. but of 'the hones and fired, two
:', -
grin
. . ,
aliots from • a revolver at him, both of :which
trait effect—onetri the abdouten and the other.
lathe arm from the-effects of Which ho died at
8 o'elticle on the following . therning,,. notwith
standing Dr. Brandt, ofTretnontoira.s sttintnoned
immediately and rendered every possible medi
cal aid.' • ; , • . i '•' -- •
• (hi Tuesdey•tuortans awarriat was issued by
Boigulre 116chtel, and placed, in !the handi of
Constable David Rank, for Prreeltra arrest. As.
the eanstable neared the hotteteßhreell discos-
• tired him and immediately 11111 sut and escaped
iota' Use woods. Constable Rank went into the
bonetrandassured Purcell's Wife that he did not
erbdt_. to arrest her husband, but that he merely .
bsid a summons for him .to appear' as a . wit
nein in the ease and that as soon as ha returned
she should tell Min. to appear .at the Justice's
oftlei3..' Doubtless. seeing the • constable leave
the - house 'Purcell returned and after hearing
what was wanted the hash:tad and wife immedi- ,
ately Started for the (ace, at which: place 'he
!nig arrested and held until after , the Coroner's
'aghast—which was also held
,by Es qui re Bech- _
tel,and a verdict renderal in a ccord with the
above facts—when he was ordered td? bb conveyed':
to•the Schu.ylkill county Prisint to await trial on
the chargera murder. The priSoner was
broughttolottavitte by Constable "livid Rank,
Mr. .1 n 'A. Salem, yesterday morning,
and drily cOmMittedFlo i jail, Where:ha awaits.
rial for the, allegedeiiident . the October Crini
:Anal Court. . ~,, . ' • ...
.V. James Kane, the murdered , matt, was an rrih-
Mall, acd about twenty-two • years. Ile-icanie!
to this County with a nufuber of other railroad
era about a week or' ten $ days ago, from ..New.
York city, and all were employed en tpo work
heftire mentioned - in thbi artiele. Ms. friends ,
are said to reside in Massachusetts. ,
Michael the man,who standseharged
with the high eritne, is, an Irishman, 14,7 ed about
fifty years, has ,his sei:.-titid wife anit a number
of children.' Kb is said, by Ittege %Vito know
him, to be peaceable, quiet man in his sutler
t .
moments, but when . under %the indil
oce,' of
liquor has n ungovernabletemper
-About two o'clock yesterday, afternoott-a .wo- -
mart, whoa° name we did net learn', ,was run
over, by - al locomotive hti the .Little Sehityl
kill - Railroad, near .Centreville, and` had her
hesd - severed from her body. " :' • :
. , . .
;The District Attorney requests- us', to ' state .
that all pr,`oseentors, defendants and witness
es in the, eases returned 'til the Septeniber
Tercet of Court are herehy notitted to appear
and -make answer at 'the Hetober Term of
the Criminal Court, to- bet held- on' Monday;
:the 3d dayUf October, 1570, or iiirleit their-re
eagnizances. .. .
'About 12- Welock on li - ednesday !light 1.,a
burglar. entered .a house in Market , streeh
with the, lintention, - doubtlks; of- Making' a
good haul ; l .The lady of the hotise.heard hini,
and thinking . , it was her hushand 'on the Stairsi
opened the - Nisil-rooni deer, when { to- . {ter sur d
prise ' she diljEuvered it to be a stranger. tilt.
called her husband's name and theburghhr go
,out of the tiouse theway he entered, in double
quick' time. The_ fellow- effected an entrant+
Mit - igh the stable and then elimed tip the grape
arbor to Ilia second-storykivindow, in the rear
'of , the . hottse: 'The alaffn was given° ti, - th'e
neighbolit' and-searchtlitade for the tr I,mitt- toe
burglar, but without sitecias. ' ' . .
.
(TR T IIiOVEEDINGS
IpiPOKTEiI KXCLINIVELY FOR THE.VAILY Ml Njil4>
Jo CHRISTOPUILICIa'rTI.E. k4 .44 1..1
• •
September •Ternt--CoMmon -
..11leas.
Thejry uin 'the Dobson and Thompson:l,am',
brought, ' a verdict, Vesterciar morning, of
It. 00 damage's in favor of DoiivoN.
~
'The other jury tlrat viia ‘ s also Out. on the ad-.
journment of the CfMrt, - the evening' before;
could riot agree, and Separated during they night.
Coming together itgain'in the:morning; they re
mained till noon without -agreeing, when
. the
Court. sent foi-themi.atid having been informed'
of their separation, discharged them„ lifter ad
ministering. a wholesome reprimand Uporithc
Icripropriety.Of their conduct 4 -. •
Seyeral•eases were tried tittringdhe tiay. • The:
brit case eallettltright vs. K probably
occupy as much of ter-day as the Court will sit,'
.though • the ,remaining•juiorriltive nut vet been
discharged.
. _ ,
. account , of the' engt;coment or several
metnbers of the War in other Caurts abroad, the
Court appointed for the week ! of 31,44 .toher
was diseontitnted„rtmilhe third'weettof.NoNean
ber 1:114f; subtitute,l.l There is filso a Court
tixetl'for•the,the ith r.s;toventher—both weeks l'or .
long causes.
'Judge (green has direetod juror-4 %Inn
:mined fur a three weeks' Term of the Criminal
Court itt ih'.tober, commencing on the
•TiFE. 1-TX - w ,MAsatin?,N,A, Bulgy IlisToirT
(OF I T S Onci..t sil 41cr to s'a k n :47ml:sits Vt. A x Ent
ca--- ITs File ter tt Aty ..N lf.i, t. To t• u.-- l Adain Fore-
Pauttit, though-yet-cm the under side of 40, has
arrived at the upper rottfal of. the ladder Of
fame, as a InanaTer of menageries :Uid -circuses.
In 1e451,. Mr. Forepaugh tsinceiveiX the idea' of.
organimarg a show that should erdiptie all, former
t it tem Ws of 'European and American, showmen,.
aunt rcsolved to.put it upon the road. fOr.a Four
year,' campaign - in this country-3 He started.
front Fhiludelphia ih the spring of Ited7; with a
ineriiwrie .composeitoe sixteen tragist of ant ,
inals=rdid, a circus, traveling through the Eastern
States, imetilig.with eonsnlerable imecess, and
rettirimig to philatlelphla for the Wittier. -Dur
ing the winter preparations Were toltde Mr the
sec . midd tour, and the show - left Phillidelphia in
the spying of
.I,tsi7, with twetity l eathat' of nuptials,
! and a circus, traveling 'th.n , ogn i d i e mkidr o
States, and (dosing a very ; profitable season in
Connersville, Indiana. The menagerie had be;
come solarge that Mr. Forepaugit conehtded' to
Imake it a separate show: - . Adding, live - MOM
rages of animals, mid originating and ittaugura
j ling the phut of using • two'separate Whim, coin-
I meneed Me seas-on of 4Stit) Under yery - ttorable
i auspices, traveling through Kentucky, huh-.
i anti Wisconsin, lowa 'and Illinok. , The past
whiter has.been devoted to making extensive
preparations for the fourth Annual tour.
.
• . J;:irly last fall, ..Mr.' Forepaugh dispatched) an
: experienced agent to Europe in search einew
attractions, w hi, a fier visiting- all: the at,iologie
' gardens on the Continent, and extendingl s
travels into Africa, succeeded in colterthig, - i
-1 gether a cargo of lieW and rare animals,- wrk
telt
. 1 , arrived ii,C.s44 - York, by the tlernran Ship \\-ail
bath, .-miry .:.31, 15;0.- After culling them
I -over and picking tint enthigh to till
. live snore
cai'Oage:4, aid a few to kil/litce sonte•tif the in
'
tenor animids iti , the old show of hist season,
F :Mr. Ferepang . lk disposed of the balatteeofte
i. ear Lot, other patties at ,a large proth.,,- . '• ..
I We admirc.the spirit apd 'energybf this young
I Manager.' There is ho tiso of wishin himisue-'
! cess: ."he is _hound to . butte it." lie sit” the
poiple have 'furnished'hint the Motley, and he
; has hui lt•up this show for their benefit,. ,>: l''
i tine or tw o more such men in the 4 - winces as
Fore - pan:A, and the piddle will sooW set their
: seat up , m : all clan-trap, mid cateliii . enny ithrt-•
' r eerns, that peranamlatethe eountry:year :Tier
I year. . - .
'.., Eorepaugh's menagerie ; now' presents va ied
attractions. :Thirty, deny of. animals:, aniong
whieh li
is - a genuine "orne,r horse," 'the. the. irst
one seen illthis country for year Old..,Wrineo
-i.t i !tome pies-a . eca it ial position,"and his 4 !httli.r.
aHociates will .no doubt. be as.,:attrair as
.' ever. .
I The eircias has liceh,.entirely re-orgarg
I.lind presents „one of the very best ar
! knnwn in the arenie profession. , "!,, ' •
'.. f .The tw6 - separate tents is- not 'the, leak,
tractive feature. _fly...this arrangement . the
l'nagerie - ,remain4 on exhibition all the thne ,
. 1
-,-- I can 'l,4' witnessed without coining -iii co
.. . , i trill) t .
I
AN AD - i:D LADY AND ItER DAVOIITER; Cif sOD., ; ------ne vir '- u ' l ' -
The walls and hill-boards• proe arm i
. I : ti
means, livfttg, together in the third'story of a I
bt!St sho,,.if'' j now ..on
building near one of our Railroad Dep o t s , were , preach of !he‘. "very
so horribly,frightened that, their recovery is l' American "'ntin"nt• 1 -" OCille f '0"
• J„ • •
doubtful. - The ;.room - tit the' 1 rear of • the' l "'""',• - . , ' - '
- yCe would remind our trailers that; this,
building which they used "am is sleeping apart- ;
meat, had awi Minty overlook higaSaMare-yat d, t - g reat 1- '""T"g li ":4 .6- eg s ti"" ,. is tt visit P
vlll4 on Ttusday,.Octl . . 4, and as we know s'
abut In by bigh[ stone walls. _ln this room at 'a i
,thine of the superiority or this over all c
late hour, several nights ago, while the young
girl eat reading to her Mother w ho %Vas seated •• shows, we "Y gO an'i. see it. . , ...
Tau Folitorn r; any r..titroeutr : ez
pr eased by cur they endorse t hem
l'O~Titnuleal n.- ortice, intended . for
publication, must ItsVe the reahlante tir the writer attach.td
—(not fur pliblicatlott, but fur wir 'I n ftwinnt h 11.1 =uuJ Ik'
-written ott one side of the 'miter tio if : othciwine, they
willAyo into the wwttrotirtleet
MANI...SCRIPT rtx - retts;:i - c: • 01. for I 1,1-o.rvlirg the
tight to utepowe of ail vinnma ti i itt I art .111..ty 41.1 !,V,Ll{tpl
,deemed most proper.. • '
/t. 1,4 apeclaliv deed rab' e that :CI I.
powsible., rind at ruhrut to the
• Sr. CLAtit, Sept. 2.1, 1870.
11.11:ssits.: Entrorins last Tuesday G.'
Jones and 'Myself nt nt f.or a wilt: tip Wolff
CreekOntending to come over the Mine Hill
home, but after we reached the dam we walked
through it mace how much water was mming
down. We lirst.took,n drink and,their traveled
up the bed of the ('reek, which k tilled with
large roeks,, with, spaves bet wi.4 , 1? them. When
some disMoice up, and in the act of kepping, - lily
footidipped and I fell heavily on a sharp rock,
my left aidestriking first, causing an intermit
contusion of, my entrails-Lthe kivi2r being
affdeted- the must, 'TlwDoctor "Says it:Will take
akW weeks .before I, recover, and should
judge so ; for the least rinoti‘m of iqy body cause,
intense pain, and when I lay 'low ii I,llllllot set
up without help, lint my liffilos arc not tiO
affected.
Tn-dav three men and two boys were-burned
at:the Wadesville Shaft: The men's Baia , s are
Tempest and Burke. Nash and Mona
ban are the names. of the looys.' Burke is - the
most injured of the lot.'
• rl‘Pday Paul tiny was killed by a fall of emd
in the noirof above Wadesville, now worked by
Joieph Penning, of St, Clair. tiuy was a Meal
pre eher in , the Methodist Church, and. Only
'Larne toithia country from England at the" he
"ginning 44 the suspension. lie leave,r to, wife
and several children in poor ciretunstaneQ4.
, . .
opposite. sowing, and while they were thus ; s,_
~:
. • ,-.-
- ,
oc
cupied a sudden hoist, at the window startled -
1 T OW TO CURE CONSUMPTION.
them, and tutningaptickly, they beheld thelliee - 1
1., i ( .
• .., . ,
cif a roan at the window ; the :daughter „would ;
, TOE PtimosoellV OEI ii It. iScligiveg'l Got: AT NlEO4*
have sereatnetValond,hut her voice failing ; her .fr es Ne.s.—Will people never learn to lit ew that a disi-.
she sank trembling upon the door. 'II ermotlier, ,-.. cased liver and stomach necessarily Iseasa the en-.
,
however, went to the window; the Dian outside
tire system? The pittluest .I'rinclplets ofi common .
sense teach this, and yet there are tuandreils who'
occupied .a ' strange , and pellet's position.— ridieuh; the.idea, and continue in the, course which
Clingilng!with,one, hand '.to the; wi,nlow sash :: altnixd inevitably briny thent7 prematurely to the
whilst the other grasped a ripe;hy .Ilie aid of: ' grave. Llvihg its the majority of, the people do, at
which he had Just 'descended trion'the roofftlie .conlidele variance withtile laws Of filature, it ittust
bold comber lowered h i s hem ' juidwh,g New (whispered .be
. appareht to all that, sooner or later, nature will
in lltitcde: Walker. tit Price are - recciviii
ret eitge lier.felf. Ileum we find that: person. .I,ow'
-
Fall Foods. daily- front New York and l' Indulge lo:Witeess In the use of very, ,richo hall
. Jilladel- gestible food.: in tox alit ing drinks, invert:CU •.pay
Tibia, mid they will lien thent at-the,lowest at heavy penal:y.ln "thetial. The titontai•lt bet. tiles
pricem_:, hide them a and be eonVitieed.' .
disordered and rettises to net; the II yitr , fulls 1.1 'yer
-. form-its functions, ilyspepslitand Itsattendant vile
- -
- • follow, and still the suitering;lndlvidnals persi t. in
''
clinging to time . thoroughiv exploited Ideas o the
past. lir. Sell ENCIC'S inealctnes arereconune tied
to all ''stiCh. ...They 'bring' Sure, and Certain relief
wherever the y are used as directed, and all that is
. necessary tit establish their reputation with very
tia , ma
allin or wot l i 111 l Ire the land Is 4 hair. an. Itn
partial trial of them. Let 'those who are skeptical
on this point, and ivliA have perntltted sate tell
personsthem to prejudice 'on against - these noW cele
brated remedies for' omsumptlow, • iiiseard their
prejudices, and be governed by the. principles of
reason .and i•ornititni sense. If the systemis.diser- ,
clonal depenitupen It, in aline eases put of ten, the
seat of the (Murder will be found In. the stem/telt
and liver. To cleansizand invigorate Chest tpaill
and to nt inn/fate-the liver to healthy action,u -- 1
Sett vocg'sMANnit.t Kg ,1 , 11,.1.5.—Th0 liilly Inereas-
Ing demand rir these pill* Is thil u b 2 : ll sit- evidence of
their value: Thousands neon th tids• of.horea
are . sold daily. Why? Simply heui. se • thcract
'prOzaptly and' efficiently. 1 Invalids_ttehei ma ;Doti ,
find It eonvenient 'to call on Dr.SCLIENCK i
crer
wre on e Informed that (unload complete diem ona •
for use accompany each - packtre of me
• MANDitAilre l'ihts, ruhiao ic tivehr , Alin
,l;A•
• AVE h:11 TONW.—TLIVIiii illEynall will cute eons p
tieri unless the lungs are ta) fer gonethat the lent
Is entirely beyond the reach of Inedleal relic
.
It inlay be asked by tired who are ate not.-fatitiller
4 u
with the virtuts4of these rear re.medles, ''llo* do
Dr. SC.IIENCK.'s inedlciti as effect ttleir wonderful
u ur t •.. s ,pf et mstunpt tour' . .
~...
The answer Is a simple one, They begin heir
work of restoration by bri iglitg the stonniellyer
mud bowels tattle int active healthy conditipti. It la
food that cut•eS, this forint,/ tole disease. Senn. era
I.t:ifili.l): El it/ LI.S, act of the liver; and stomakh
promoting healthy seer-etl n, and ketnovlng the bile
• and slime Which have resulted from itho inactive or
• torpid could lion of these organs, and of the systeni
generally. This sluggish state of tlici; nods, and the
consequent accumulation' 'of the 11rilielathy 111111.._
stances slanted prevent tlig proper dl*estion of fort ,` alai 11. s a natural conseque nce ereatetvdlskute, which
results In pNstrat ion and tinnily in death.. ,
• Sot nisunS PULMiINIC SY 4uranclSELtwia:b ToNic, -
when taker regularly , millet , . with the foist, aid the
digestive o -guns, make. godil - rich blood, and as fit -
nut ural consequence, give flesh and' Strength e \l e .o the
patient. I,et the faculty say 'what it May, Ulla is th e
only true ^ere for eonsulnptlon. Experlen has
proved It beyond-111e shadow of a doubt, and
re t tdous
ands a to-day all vh and Well whoa few years , nee
were regarded us. luipeless !cases, butt. who were in
duced to try Dr. SCIIEN - IC'S remedies, and were
restored to permanent hen th by their use.
. One of the first steps , it e physician should take
with a consumptive patient is la - Invigorate the
M
system. Now. how leeilt to be done ?• Certainly
no by glv ing medicines that exhaust and enerqute—
• medicines that irliPair Instead of improve the func
tions of the digestive organs. Doctor SCHEI I CIUS
medicines. cleanse the ateniach and bowels of all
substances which are calculated to I r tate or weaken
them. They create an appctite—pm note healthful
;digestion—make good blond , and, as consequence,
they Invigorate and strengthen the.' entire system,:
It
'and metre especially those parts watch are diseased.
Ifthis cannot be, done, then the ease must be re
garded as a Itopeless one. 1• - I . •-, • ,
. r If the physlc.au dads it Italic:sail:le ,to makes pa.
tielif feel Min - ars - fit the ditzted person cannot par.-
take of good non rlshingft and properly digest It,'
It Lsiniposaltile that he calgain In neshand strength; .
N
and it - isastily Mapossib eto bring a patient iothEs.
condition so long us the I ver is burdened snubdie.
eased Idle, rind the stomach laden ' with . unlit thy
slime. :
Almost the tirst request Linde to the pbysiel by
a cousumptivepatient is that he willprescribe hied-
!clues that wilt remove Or allay the cough, night"
sweats and chills, which sire the sure - attendants on
consumption, lint this shouhl• not be done, as the
cOuldi is only an effort or nature- tel relieve itself,
and the night sweats any chills are caused - byyyy the
diseased lungs, The remedies ordinarily preiie bed
do more harm thee goo( . They Impair the une- .
the' of the stomach, impetlehealthYidlgestle and
aggravate rather than Curie the disease. -•
• There itt. - „ after all, nothing like facts with' Which
to subAtatirinte it litn<lll6llll, and It is upon facts that
Dr..SCliKNeli relics, Niarly all who have taken
'his medieinei in- acooninuee w VIE his directions
hi- .I Vt. Ant:OnlY been cured Of consumption, batittoin
the faet-thet these merit Ines wet, with wonderful
Wirer Illital '4 l lO digest , e organs,, patients thus
.curisisipeedit gain gesb ~ ,C learnting the system ()f
-all Imperil . they hity t . 1 1ounikatillin th,.. fot e solid,
autrita4s: mature: ' taring .10.
' Lieak Istvitiensinp Ito.- - 'lrteZoirll:Ferly '
i
ant t gf Val tilt of blood Isnot rib, tn,
creriSeil, butts e richated strong and. ili•the lace
of ouch *condi, •eg 5 , syebenivall diem* dust
Full directions 'accornp each Of the tuedichkes_i
do that It Is not. absolutely herensary that patients
.should she Dr. SCtIENCX.' Poniculeity. tile" 0 1 47
desire to have their lungA eratpinftl. For his on ,
Mine belga!, his principal, otficeiso. 15 North alatia.
St.itorner of•Cninmerr - caderphla, every Bettirr
day nun 9a. M. anti)
Advice is given Irttf• ~ teit - kir ath •gh
.
isnilnstlork with t" - .ter the charge hi tn.
14
Filen otthe Pr 'ld Seaweed do
Pair
Mr dos.-
WAR 1111SCELL4
~ . .
. .
A WAtrinc(o,p Victor lingo --thiii. order (it
.
I,t us. otf the supply of g.. 1.4 ill Par i.;..',1'
,
1 WIURINX tltinkM 0191 the "alliiktire Detaltiark
delgtitp accept is 0111 yl.l orciatiletl.
A PRI.iItRIAN sputa calle,f hn a French miner
to grind some Hour, but he only. lioltekl.
NAPOLEON walks -e,instatitly
That'll only to make people think he is; still on
his feet.' ' ' '
N,,s.rot.sox's surrender atSedari inn hardly ho
=lied his, ! "crow ning' disastet : it was rather of
another sort. ,
.
~
TuE FRENCH prisoners; in Genitally receiveAL
the ne*s of Napo - loon - a ,iletbronentent 'NA 1W
great satiathetien, , . . .
A. ST. Xons's Nr.wsnoi .uSionislipil the pub
lic by crying the news of Napoleihi's surrender
"Here's all about the gr at Hosea Pr94vgi l i t nt.."
TOE PARISIANS omtillue to at inue themsel \ es
with renaming their streets: The same or Pe
miirny; . borne by. a street leading out of the
Faubourg St.. Hunore to the Camps 1-...lyseres; is
now replaced by that ot.AlseNlalion. - •
IN vizw of the fact that the • gay capital : of
France has been totally severed iron, sip con
nection-With us outside barbarians, we do not
febl so much like - asking ,"Whatis home. with
out a mother T'7 as'" }'hat is' this world,withMit:,
's Polar - I ..- •
•
As Esoialta correspondent givis; the ffillow
ing anecdototelative - lo the treat ==tent of Napo,
leen by the .741gliab "raw : "A friend:of untie
was staying at 41unpiegne. One Moroi :Ig, the
Euiror, entered his room with Prick in'llis
•b an - • 'it- ;height. you might like to see
this.'' king .- pointing to a severe caricature
eghbieezr; 4 ibi ape.' he continued, 'this is when
rbell Is 'very angry with me.. Ptssat is
- OW Mattes ; and now .1 will show you
- "- the same artist, - at the tune
as
a no n , • - r - • eortliale; - . Just See bow' handsome
I am When " they want. Me,
.stria how hitioottii
when ithey deln't.' 1 think, sir. this shows - how
tinthlty the Emperor appreciates the criti
cisintil.,_,a portion of our press." .. • 1 -
- ge " lit" • 'ill .Fre nc h
. ..,_ A I.,Enz os (:. seventh Soy
rereigu deprived of his - liberty by the fate of
battkei,. Lcadsle Debounsire, in el% was' con
lined by his sops, with his second wife, Jitditli.
in a monastery; In ' NO,. Charles the Bold was
`made prilloper by the revolted nobles. .Jobtrl:'
• was rued captive - at the battle of Poictiers,. !lei
-delive up his sword to a Beighin, _knight,
J;frents de !Jerks:nue. ,' Louis Xl. was forcibly
,
•condu by Char es the -Bold , in tsio suite of
,the Bu tidbit] itchy, which Was going tribe- -
siegethe legeols, the king's own aides. Fran-,
• cis 1., was c , prisonerat the battle of Pavia.
Like Kai John, be gave up his:Sword to a Bel
ghui,l Co - u "t; •do Lannoy, Yieerny .of Naples. -
Lsstly. Nit loon I..sturen - qered twice, in 1814
1ind1815.,;, r, • . : .. 4 , ' .
- _ - FilittkrAl' PARIS ,MAY 1W Ilu•itN to.- , -Tito
PALL . bl:ict. tiikErric -2i.:iyii: "There is Some
reason to teurtbat Parisway be burned down
by the' -bealeited: Oren. if she • escapes the be
- elegem _ There are In , that city- 'vast .stores of
petraleisM; ;alcohol, . and. Other combustible
agents - - to -; be used is Its defenee. - • These stores -
ere at present covered, with' a thick'layer of
wartli, Whit* tnight:.be: a aullieleig proteetloo ,
under, ordinary eirenutitanfts,, but,. to - sily._,
nothing-of, possibility' . or n Well pencirating . '
nabs craverin the danger must - he mare ii of *
jpwwwslaz " Won when -we tatke.into 'count`
tbarecklemiri of desperate men who; in. their
sspresse-to utilize every - means et thelk dia.-
peed tar the destructhwo( tho enemy., and, are
not. likely to be carefully' to tins safety either of
- Omnibus* or the city' wylsre defending.: Per. ham as- regards destraiMm of property, tho
mueslis warts of war lOW never in the world's'
Idatory been more Ikwcitty illustrated their hi ,
the,mereporibillty it present et Wang of par's.
"being laid in rains. . .. - .. • • •
. 40.777--,7-r-77--.---7—,--77474sowerpfusettir,
,I. '-•••- - '`• 7 z" - A. .. _. ••,:.,--....,.,-..:,,,..xi1„t.t.....
FOBEiG.* .YEIS BUDGET.
l'1,$1 , 11.1 , ;11 FRO* if N. us
TitsTlDr:or E vriGizATIO N.I—NOIN t.lli 4tld ing
the cbmplete Stop which the 11•ar has put to Der-
Men emigration, the exodus through_ Liverpool .
during:August:Vat only 401 k less- tifin •in the.
Corresponding thonth huit , year. The great
majority•of the einigrams weirc'English. •
• i •
tiurrosan FL•Telin: Estualvew bt Lows'Na-..
woN.4-1t is stated; apparently on good -au=
Dimity, that agents are in treaty on behalf of
the:ex-Emperor of the French from . Brasted
Park, Keiat,•some twO• ni ilea from Sevenoaks,;
an. eigiht, from Tunbridge Wells, Which' is
iii)otaid to possess a special cure for the male;.
dy under which tea dethrened monarcheulfcrs.
Brasted Park Was atsint a century ago the prop
erty of aloriner.Lord Willonghby - de Broke. -'—
By itith its was sold to Dr. ;.john Torten, phy
sician to the•Kingatl Queen HI 1703 who re
built the mansion. At his i decenso t he! Court;
physicianphysician Turton,
and ,tipsall,, North . .Yorkatilte, from..
whom' it wits purchased by Tipping, P.
Louis Nispoleonmeeupied this Mansion for
years iinniediately proceeding his attempt upon
-Wlifeb, he sufit4 r ed •
,iiiiprisonment
at Ilani.. i •
ACeitous 1 5 4ssarin f...vin PlutarehAms been
eommunicited to the Academy orStiienees by
lg. Wilfred tie Fonvielle; sli'rwing - thatlhe and ,
ciients maim not finite so ignorant of aStrcinotify
aS we lina,•-ine. 4 ' • It is WI - (*MOWS :—"The very
motion of thelitoon; the sort Of whirlwind pro
du&dby Its rerolutiburonnd the earth, is what
prevents it fr4M tailing. It fs thus'the -circular
inotiop of thUt;s - putr-- into a piling opposes itself
to their returning to the centre. • For it is the•
nature of motion . to draw bodies-into its diree-.
Lion unles3. it .he tented; away by another.'
Therefore, - it heaviness diva not make the moon '
fall, it is because the 'tendency (of that. form) is --
destroyed by,the circular Motion. What would
be surprising would be the moon's not falling,
if it remained at rest like the
and were de-.
',rived of rotation." JI. W. do lonvielle truly
remarks thst *e-rould lati 4 tilY ospreys the theo
ry in more correct terms ili(7o. , .; -• :
it . , •
TitE 1:RAVI; OF rit!.: lio 11E11 OF lIVICSS.—III
the paroi.churchya I o toltOti lies interred
all that is mortal of Agno Brown, the, hmOttr ,
_ei infitlairof the national poet, Hobert Minis:-
Gilbert Burns, (he eldest son of the . family,
When factor to Loid Blau 're, resided at Grad's
Braes, his' aged mother li ing with him;_ and at
her death She wa. , inters in the. chatrebyard..•
. One after unOther of Gil , rt's family 'fellowed '
or pti - v.etled their grandm ther to thergrave,- till
live 4c the younger: gcne6tion,.. all taken away
in the bloom of lifp, lay i 1 cside her, - along with
[laughter;a[laughter; . the younger hiter of the poet. Tu.
mark the spot. 4 illi!ert er iced a neat headstone,
. on which arc inscribed thei names of those Who"
Ile beneath. In due timelds own was added to
the rest, and the warin-litearted but sagacious
elder brother of Burns new sleeps quietly With
.• his I indred in the elltirchyard of Bolton, far
iaway font the yllerouthi murmuring. of- the,
I ioon,,,with which he fatniliar in the, days of
his youth. The burying. place of theMikis
, •tittnify is HOW 'surroimded by it ehaste.htit sub
...,tantial l imn riffling. The surviVers Of Burns
V . -are not hinninflint at-tile plats Itltich Agnes
; Brown- holds in the itirectionittOlegard Of
1 Scotehincii. But forcherthe - ','Cotter'S Saturday
- Night" might never- have' lieeti written; matt
.catinot be uninteresting 4o the dWellers' of East
Ll:titian to knoWjshat her remains lieburied hr.
oke of the itulettAt anti most peaceful of our
country, elturiliyarils, "Where the. trees. which
cast their morning s.,adows over the-graves are,
rellerted in ;the •sweet waters or,the eoalstott
_streattilet as it flows eastward to the Tyne. _
In
EN
SEPTgMBER, 187(L
HEERY fiId.YLOR'S RED OIL-LINIMEN,tr.
:The great external remedy for Illusitnatisni,
Neuralgia, Sprains,- Bruises, Chilblains,
StifTuk.ss of the .1olats; 41:e. iNVOteml 11;4 AIW/
qualities as a Linitnent,"it will prove itself a friend.
ln-eveyy finally In ;crises of Itlietunatkti:
=iglu; elther'siighfor gerions,dt always ready 11 ) • '
relieve pain'. Tills I.lnintent has been in use for
last fifteen years, and /nix given entire satisfaeii,,,,
wherever. It has beencnticti.. •
• Prepared and sold "..ftyi: Mrs. i t! L ott,
Centre St., rottiville. Agent al - filjtieiPville - ; la', •
KENCE BROWN.' Druggists; Ashland, 11, j,: . . -
- MAIZE, Druggist. - • . 7 4 ,1 -t to
'WHAT DOES .11,EASON SAY?—The
'when. bit ten by a deadly serpent .resorts tour t-ert
plant, eats orti, and eiseapestin_f effect of the isti.ta,••
That is Instinct. Human beingi on the other bawl:.
must depend on reason and experience in solecrit, - „ ;
thesnearis of protecting healt' and life against un
whalesonte in truences. Now, what does reason ,
'On this.vitalshbJect, DO£44 It not tell ns that ht.i ill •
vigontteand purify .the system is the instt. wily 1.,
• protect it against the invisible poison whic h ...-eh";
ates disease?" Surely it:dues. - The next ?question
what guide shalt we .fullawln choosing a 111c-diet:l
safeguard.? Iteason replies leylbur monitor lie .x_
pertence. Well, the 'experience of - Outlives: years
comprised. in 'one unbroken series of sath.facmte
testimonials assures.. us that Hostetter's sttonnict,
Bitters possess strengthening; mutilating arid ant s•
septic properties which" are not rombitattl. In th • ••
saute 'nappy - proportions', - in any. other peep:Aro•on 7
extant. -This . therefore Is the antidote , to wh i ch .-
mason bids us reAurt.w hen our health is lin is-r hst,
either by the maleris Which produCes " •
orders, or. by any oilier (muse, Whether i len., 11 I
constltutlonril pr connected. with our habit", -
patioti and pursuits., -' • , L •
The venom of a noxious rupt Ire .1S ~ , ,,tret•ly 441.' 0?
aubtlo and dangerous than that which ii ht:
'air and int : pure water, Tovie:fiat the :f. ,
disordepr, disturbances ielf the bt - twe!:•; , .-attil
• tzierfoas maladies produced by these lifictitthrhan r 1,.,
nteat,s„ It hi absolutely necessary ' that.'
tin 4 all the Secisitivo organs shooed he, so to spte,a:t,
it,robust enndltion. Upon the a3.11 , k1 tat T. 41.).
atienWhich the et al systenisan to los
/terlottsintlueut,W 'than it, tue sattly itt '
health depends, I•eraumt:.l.tw
TASiLE faaNs. imparts (frier:Ty and reguittru
to the flutist linpOrtaitit functions at the ly•ts, that. it
rail be recoinnietideci"anii.guttran teed tts fit tti ,
aide preventiti - e tuet'icinef -
Jan 1,'70 • .
.I-tv
Marriages:
BOW L'Elt —Mg - AD—At. Ww - lesville. b‘y
evening, sr pt 19 , nt U 11.01.115 e nf the tahi•t's , ;
fiy • fteat."James cieurge, tLi.r.tar nowt.F.:l:, of M.
La free. In MAIO, TIE.% Wndesv I Ile.
AZZ D—FII.EI: 4 ,--rn ChiNt Ott! rob , Mead i
on tilt. nttL, by Itev..J. Pinkn•n- 1111111!11,ttlli,
•
V. tor, Mr. Fronk.lmtard, of l'Ot 1,o; illy, m . id
4121nru A. 1 , 4-e4. of Read icia.
•
- '3r.A•SSOST..-- - It A . EASTA g ; • : Nth. 1 57.1041
the rooderiee of Sanflrord ii. Purdy, 1:,!..t..t.y the R.
M. Setiihmit , r, Mr. FM went • \Y. M wo.on, fnrinertl
or Ilittau.lopl.ila, to Misa,Saili.. M. Vciokeilono.
TottNville. , . •
, .
Iltatbt.
. ~~,
. _ . . . .
,
. . . ,
An:LT.:el; —4 )11 Sil ilitty , - ... 1 et , 1 . 1 , 1. I ' l.lll 4 iY.1.4 , 4•1., 1,:. '
M., ),VILLIANIAFFI,ECk, in i lira g yrar Ad 111, Isg.•, -
- ,
e 'iFOX--.on the: 9.t.t.s:lnst.." M Aieil AI ET i Itl i N1 , 11:.b.
dapitlitee of littlttin Ili Mid I hi - ll* 1t• DAti y t'.1 , ,,,;,
aged 9 kilontll9 and 21- itti3"s._ . . . ~
. .
MARTZ—On Vie. !sill inst., in rt,ttsvit;.•,.i.;:. l .,.. k .
BETH RFAIIKLLa, younfzyst datiglifor
M. B. Mart . ; Ili the •.))th your of her -
SIERTLY-S 4 ,4‘pltntilier 191.11,1 , 7.), Wri.t.i.s.m 6;I:AN r
..youtigt. 14011 of Jacob - and Add o•
t 34 nerto. ilte, J:tt. Sept. :I. ';u-1-.45.
(ait - bibates..
CHIVP fUEGESS. The tioder,,:soo.:l
L. himself ass' eanditlitte for 'Wet rge,,
Itubjet to theilt.eimott ot Reptililtrail.N•a..
COilyelitiun. , J 0:4E1'11 SUE:Whit.. -'
§eAt.
•
17, '7ll-4:...-20 , ••• • , :
. .
f. est imb'Nounb.
T . 08. T Ott. STRAY Tue , day,
• 1:TWO ot)Wri,--t he one n staal I Orovi t
short Few*, and a whlth-f,trr , pe clown hivt hark_
'tonna interned ,nions: the other was a Itel,
with white five, lutge frame and very "Iron
Any Intor I
mat 'A is t I .
thankfully ri.ectr.l ny the owner. .
5ept1a;•7047,46: j n i) t • it, , •
Praposnis . .
• •1 i • •
INals for Sil • V !.
Land Et:1; CliA I. for the set, try Ikillll 1,. 1 ,
ttomie will be ree‘d Vett V:Q.' II 111 i. I
Ler 3d:the Name I u he delivered at i'rep.sdna...
)1. \V. '
Ulf,' Ix In-lt
141 r. V,:41-.
Kept 10: 'TO-3,7-,31
I3ROPOS S will IA: cl,l,tlZl 11 at the: t"I:n• :
1 Sitar( rol iery, near St. for di icin g a Toe
nel front the l:uatnot It, to 1 he• Shiiintore Veit:. a
tance say.ilittv :,: i
:wide in hottotit,,l, feet whle nt lep, 7 eV. lih<ti.
:a.t. W. 1.4
tsvine, r-..
. • •
•••••••
- • .
I;STATE -4 LASI.IO•I4N.
1.. CEASED.-"Wheri.as,lettvr. , l Adowiktratlon
'to the estate: of Daniel Esitopi; htte L.f the, fic,rottgis
of - Palo - Alto, in: tit.. t Thai;
have lava grunted •to the . - ,`tih.4:rihi.r,"l‘ll
log (quints against vhei:P!7:itne or. re,r,es.,ted
make them known, and ,11 wase, indetatd dot tic
to make. Immediate payment. ' _
GEORGE v. .k,ltninist ranir.
Aug. 4 7- '7O-3.5.-ta. • Pah, A t,s'
STATE' OF 'WILLIAM D.. DAVIS: DIL,
CEASED.- , -Leiters testamentary upon the
tate of NV itllant H. Dads; late of Tot tsvi 11,, .1.
Jtaving help granted to the .tinderslgned,. ad. .
indebted to said estate arc recittes.ted to•tincke.
inont; and those having elaltns against the -.. , utue
present thear_to. ELIZABETH I..AN
• Kkeentrix, I'4h-vilte,
' •or C,ntre St., ottsvi-th ,
Aug: .
Notices.
M °TlCE liereliv eleco that aptille:t•lon
li
%I he made n) his Ifx,itti v ney, h , :irry. to par
don Isaac eonv iete. at ' he. Septet:The - I.
SiIITIS, 1.4G1. of LareenY; and ,1•11t. - 11,0d to i mprison=
merit for three years. , f-ept IT
.
CIitUYL KILL • OUNTY . AGRICULT
RALI3OC/ETY.—Notice Is hereby given that
the Nineteenth Annual .Exiiibillon of the Strie&tt: ,
will begieid at ORWIGS1.11."1:0, on ,
TU.E.SLA )7;. the 4th, day 'Of OCTOREI nr t,.. '
loeontlnue for-three.doys. The date On
tug an error, one day toes early, and. should be e, -
rikted SA Nl'l, U. I. A p DEN, IL
Sept 17. '7O-441.--lit. .• •
I ze d ,
ISt.%
FRICIVELPATEiT ESQATARE. ROD
• .
AN-D . WIRE SCREEN
at
me-
and
tact
NOTi4" Ti;.INVRINGEIL,;
The .undersigned havit4been irrunteil
cut, dated' 'September' nth ,
;1874, (No. W.. 1 7 1, .
for rut ',1.,/ tnproreci rtnEC Reid.
he hereby Avtairs [Mist, who - are , knoielitg
lyinfringreig itpou.' his right, or using ,
without, alittio{ity. that wurtilly
said infringement or use, They Will be proeeisled_
against in the rpf..pei Courts for reeitenint ntill
-Sept Iy, '7O-n-,4'
the
Ats
me-
the r
THE PAII.TikiERSHIP •lierehihire exist me ii, -
V.veen DAVID llk.ussiy; and TlliOr A 8 Itlt.\: ,- -0`....
J it., it: thls! day tlissoled by the' death of Tie mee.
.13riuninn, Jr.' Alt-persi ins ha , : 1 tig . eta I tits agiti a-• t:
,t 1,, •
sold tiro will pres t.(ent I
el.ll at pipit to the Stlrtis" 1.1..;
partner, who - will liquidate the same, and part ies to
debt thereto are.requested to make early play mei::
:to tie undersigned, wlio wilt eon t in tie the coarll e:ri . i
ness as heretofore. tinder the old -tine name M
BRANSON it, .BRO. :. DAV I D BRA NSoN„
• Nu. 507 Brotid street,. and Ills Washington /Will o••
Sept. 3, 70 — . ?. i . 30.-4t
. •
-MHE CO-PARTNEBSILIP heretofore existing
.1.. under the firm name of WI•ILD; N AULT:. St A. , )„.
in. New York nod rhiladelphin, atah,WELD, siti , ..l.:
WIN it CO., In llostoli.•Is Hilted:ly dissolved by lie
tual consent. The tterounts of the old Brat; WO 1..:
settled nO and the lautinesli eimt i! t moil. by t ill._ lie,:
firm i.A.WkILD, RICE it CO.-, t
t4EIO. M.\ WELD, ' • • EliWit;lt•D Sit LBW 4:,
11. - W: NLAGLE. ,-. HENRA - A. ItIt:1;. Jit
• . I.'
I.EIE.HNHEBBIGNED havii this day forniiM i
.CO-I'ARTNERSIIIP for-.the purrier:e oi e,irr:,
lug on a Genet4EWholesate•Shipping and I %Oil tIO ,
t:1011 Coal ilttsinet§l., under_ the -style i,r wEi:I. , !
RICE .t COr.,nt;''' - - :''. • -- .• ' .
•
..kriii:i.Wii 1 !Mi. i,4,4' Philadelphia ; 11l Itroadi., “!„ -
I
EO.
N w : York ; 11 .1 i t e y S A L . ,:l i l t i i is t t . i v a . i.
- . GEO. M. WELD;-.
MOILA.QE HOWL.% ND. . - .
A 11 - ' ' AI, '7041- J
L Trot Sate antiii let.
- •
Volt SAI,E.—A nen' and first-class Toil`:•.'1"
FOR
GT:, Terms reasonably.. 'Apply to •
May 7'Te-11t-t : WM. It. SMITH. NI At
VALUABLE PROPERTY ,FPR SALE. •
- THE BITILDI:4CS AN4.) PHEAIIs,F:S
fortUerly occupied by the
• SCHUYLKILL' COB.NTY LI IBEIi A 'Q.,
eolaeleting of a large brlet: and akin, shop,
steam power and tools for ' •
•
PLANING and MAN UTAPTUItING
with ,
lumber alitals;tilitiralant yard roo, and
corrvenietices for a hkrite.business. 'ni
This prai,er
si t uated In the Itokov u trot: PorritV ILae, Allot
(roll -
on the Railroad, and Is othkrwlSe syell lotat,tl. -
- Will be kot.o Low and upon easy terms of pay niellt-
Apply to.- JOIN L. POTT, Pottsville, P...
• I or, BENI:Purr, 2215 Mt, Vernon
- eptilo,.tl-37-tc) " Philadelphia.
T 0 L ET.--A -lease on the Mammoth, NI: idinoi,
to the Staliauoy, two miler run. tad -
feet. Also.alled Ash lease above wider, iii !Seltu:,
kill Valley, • ••
FOR tiALE.—An interes new-. trollkry,
.Opt`tling.• • • . •
Also, A 'LA E"C01. IE VAwhite
equipped,.iu* w.wklou! Aye waterqeVel, li. Mato,
uoy.
A WI ITEINSII COLLIE:RV e
-
A tt iG rlevel., on Mill Creek.
Also, two twins on Red Asli,bects.'lilinersv i i tar , .
• Atig.4l.'7o-157ial- V. W. :silt:A r•Eii:
. . •
FOR BALE.-012e•Dotible I'.t4liker ior *tea A,,,
011 complete rind u.. good :is new
40 . bovse engine, bonen, hot*, lilt; gearing for
one 12 ft fati,B horr,ef l
(...ig.ne and liviti . ll4l otle-fii ,
ton bay twalet." • . " ' •-- .
251 tees boring - rotbi With bits, 4.i . c., all itvemnpf.--:-
-
order.. - - . -
Also, a set of liolatiig . gteikrlng for slope, pipt...n::
other artleles.Y. - Apply to C. M. 11)144-Agent.
c lno Centro street, INgts% ilk,
. i "st ii• %V - I 1
AuuuNt 6, '7O-:U.,t
FOB nr4SITWOOt
Ing,' , corber ...etorn
Ai2ly to nr.NRY C. It
18 aliantongaiitreet.
Unreh 134( , •
_
POR 1311./..Z.=-Orte - R.
4: sutable, for,u4rrlnge
itEL J>RAFT HORSE
or wagon home. App
•
SAHHEL
Sept 10,70-37-t(-179-tt
. . gui her:-
_SAMUEL BALL, WHOLESALE AND It i-:TA 11
LUMBER DEALER,
I.: .. COAL ST.:utla TtAl AtOA 1) lii:POT. -• -•
.... . . v.
...
, _
... • - ~ - will keep eonituuti ,
• . oil , _,,, 13. , 011 1111{1)1 a folras,oll
- :•.:.,"7:71' , :- - A ':.,,,,' ' taunt of Ituilaloi 1.t0i.-
, ~- 3 , ,1 id, " .. ' - ' b r, which lit• ‘i ill guar -
' 1, 7 .. 411;1 . % r e Mitt eto Nell at 110• •
.':. 4 •T (Oa.. ' ..
• I.4),WF.:`T M.IiK ET
{ • i . : .I 4 11fmag.. , ,..°1 - iti, 1:111,1,'..0.
I - ... -I '' -": 'sz ID Sit'lli m. , .. - o)vvnt , i.v.
SeOt 10, 11.i-37-41-179-tf
- .. _.• .
- __...
-GOODS ,AVTI 011.NLEI"s..
Why we .sell au cheap!
i3tiranesa! 'Cash Purchases Ise &shas,l -
Con! A Ltre.Lon4 - Experlc,ne .
(Over 17 ymrs on , gliriti (lardenistrt!!4. , "j
iia . t)• °IDA{ tii Slidi,A3rit s MOS' r F •
khlOhA, c-iutigaclng every Variety of.
' . Shlce re.,•III.wKI V.
i l l rtt qps4
Casshherta autrhhuun.
. .
JosErtl I.I.III(JRNLEY,AIIato Moroley st:
Spring tGarden Sin.; Philads.
fllanteb.
tices InThoisel's :1.!
and *it. mir..,'S; v.
Heal Est.:air ,%;.•,i•!,4
Y IttiltStl•fi•pveit ,•;,;
Tmpring wagea. oia•
.
Oven year, old, a g;.;;; I:4 , ;;
itt the 0tt1e....91
itALL, Luttlbtrl)..ah•t,
.
'oaf INII•v. I
i.1 , 1:1‘..t . ei.
co*ts,"sy.l OA; ii
Eil
=I
REIM
D
■