• i F L , . . - . 9 • 1 , . .. . - .... . . i . , , . . . . . - • . . •.. , . . .., . . ... . ^ .. -• • k s . . - , . . . • , . - . . . . , • .• - . . . . . : • - - . . . • ~ • , Th' . • - • 1 - s'. . . ' • - / , , ° • • • i. . : . • L.- • - • - •;.,., . • . . -.- . . , •'.'''! I:oR - ry-si.x--,ri I YEAR. No .41 . ' • • . • .. ,1 . . •`• • i ... i - -...! i , . •. • - - - . ~ -1 , . '' ' 1 - • i ' , . , , - . - . • .. - ~. . • ,• __. _ __;__ _ ___.______ _ -. , . -- 1 . 2• . " ".- :. tt .C 0 A.L T* AIDE . . . • ADVERTIS_E'IVI.I_:_L. i TS. -. . ~... ,• -,_•,, , . Cuuthrr. - ' ' ' ' - _ ___ _____. ___ ___ • • .- j UMBER! LUMBER I i . . tOrt IliC4lnOpb.--. • ... . .: 'Port Siditilollll. T . • .: ... , . 1 . ~ ~ . . . i P.4llo3,t;plita, ,C.r. . J...... TO UNDEItTAK ERIS AND CHAIRMAKERS. . • We illya Ott hand a large lot of seasoned ,?,;" OVAL. -,-. ___ ___ - -:* ( OFFIN BO Alt rtS and POPLAR CHAIR and 'SET- Pirr Ns. 4 Purl Hickmanstl. • Pier No. IT, Port Itlelunosid. ":* ."' • TEE. PLA.NR., The above lithe heat quality of IN ., " •• Whitn , McCredry 1 & .Kemmerer, -1.4.8NA-JA.-mnEe.. eo.-tA..t. RAL I DENBUSII. , .-, W.ELD, .RICE ' & C 40.•,,...!. AUDENRIEb T NORTON. eI 'CO.' ' , . ... .Jelly 30. -31-u eor. 4111 A Spruce t3ts.. Reading. I'a. ' ' . Shippefe of the Ite.st GLltalities of • ' • )• - Upper Lehigh an other F. irp Crass -.-' LU MB ER! LUMBER! . ,„, , Miners and Shippers of ~ .. •.• •• -.-, ~.• 13 1 0,..01 FEET OF WESTERN 1..1.7,113 • 4,11:." . - - , .. H A 1,143 K IN and 14:111 - TyLKILL ~ . - ii - ~. 'LEHI ~..,, .. . . ~ _... IIt , &.•WrMING COALS. .- - . • _ _ . . • .1304 S & nAuli - E..?..-4 - iusia, -- . .._ , , • FIRST C L AS S . COAL. ~ ... . . RED.and WIIITE ASH . ..,,.... . „._ , r • •, Corner Ith and - Z4pruce-Bts., Reading, Pa. • - • 2 . •" • LoCtsT ktoryTA.Df.- -, - '. • -•1 f ' , ,• ,„.•-•- 0tt1ee..:27-4 Walnut treet,•i,c,imud.Alory,', . I : . G - :A • - • . • • We ten, ermalantly on band M 1 ehtitali Panel, In. .i From our two large and oelebrated"Colileries . ' ''- -- .., \'‘ . - . , *MIZE', DELI:," • . i .., 'C. F. NORTON • & CO. , . • • . dlfitta Walnut, Poplar Chair Plank, ,",•,•', Poplar, and' e.• I - Ai:X.NT% I. on. in E. CEL RATt:D . Ash Lumber:, ulltwaioned. The Walnut rans from • p I .1 , .: E - i',: - N .1 T " and other, ch lee "I'o VIINENTI, L," e ,PHILAD r ELPHIA. .• ' ' .. . , . 12 toll/inches wide and all thle.knesses, and the :$,,.,. • ••••••• G DETINTE.&:AIIDENIIIED ' • • '. ,W B•ii.m-rtsv (Igo. D. Nevitx.sity, B. s.'grafetatia. Poplar from 15 toso inches wide. Tice quality of the L ( NT'ST - me UNTAIN COAL, '.. , „ '-Walruat and Poplar cannot be surpassed !many mar -1 LoRSERRT: - :., Re tl O7O 1070 :17-!...in Id' YIDERLAND'VEIX BiTEMIN I.S. ' ' ___.• - ; ; • , • .., - . -_-„ _ Iter,"aio we are selliug lower than the city market. • Free Muhl:lß - Red - Ash: and Splendid Preparatlon: -37----7---- lk -,-- t -.' • • ' All plift les in tanninf any kinds of Liirnher wor:11 . . . i 1.15 1 .: \Talmo St.. Mitsui • dphla, .rOLKRTT coLLIERY..... - .., Owen; &Co THONAS • C PARR LS H, dowel,. e.‘ll and examine our stock. July 9, - 70 4 elticen :-. 114 Biodal:1y, 4.,• 1 :mv York . JILLIDLE CREEK CO L LIERY,...I-..C.COlkett,Breiit.; .. -• 1 - imippEg AN DEALER IN. • ~' _ I 1 litiatie !its all, Iteuttat . ' i " ~, •••• an. I, 70 ntf 1"- ' ) ' L. U:IaWIL • • . : •- , . :. : • . Ike NO., 5, Poet Ric ond. ' • ENTER!' RISE COLLIERY, T. Batimkattiner„ Pent. - 7 p • . Lehigh, Sehuliklil and Bitaminotis' •_ • •_ • - • LUM B ER . , . HAAS & BR.EI IZER - Locum, Mtinntaln and Lorberry, &Lao ina Sclinylkill • " ..... C o A. T., ~ . _ . , Canal, to allPointa accessible by. boats. ~‘ , P A R D. E E & C 0 0 1 .- , -. - . .. ~ . 4-• • - • - .. . , ~ 1 1328 . Walnut 'Street. , Philadelphia. , ..,.• ('',Onsignments on VoMmtission Solicited and taken ‘. ' 4 st.tisurAcrc itku.s AN tt It Ea I.ERS IN -41 % Minas- and Shippe . of' Omega : 111 Broadway, Nevr York. .• . . ,: .on favorable Terms! [ ;., ' -„;-=. ItIIII. TIMISER, ;FOR BRIDGES., lIREAI:EttS, . 27 Doane, Street. Boston. • '-' • - . Ortlce-..j41 Walniti St., Philadelphia. •' , . . Boats sawtsl [mm White' and Yellow Pitre, . • ',. • TIIE..,k1711:1:10rt •'; , J: T. AI.IDENRIED. C. F. .NORTON, ,". May 1, 'ti - • • /,-/-r • - Oak a ill ._n. enzlock, and shipped, to orde, . . CH.As. D. :NORTON - It. OCIRR vet .r. I .• ____ _ ~ Alsn. FLANK 1.10A1111,S Shingles, LATH FLOOR ., . , Jar). 1, 70. . 1.-= ' -- IUR KEY; RI,,TN - COAL, . . • •- --- ---- LEISATIS & • ALKINS, ING,Ac. oinci - 4111t. WArSotrtrrOWN, PA, kat! . . , .. Pler.lla.ll,Pt. Itichnond. • - i , • Loek ILL vx...v . . l's. . . ".. . • - .'• . • itrstas! AND sißrer:u.s oF a nt: . P.S.We shiplky bfettandltallread. A prll9, '7O-15-Gum A .st. Hwy: .i.os::e - rs ro SNYDER & SEEOZIAA,ICER . • • c , . Lee, Grant 3: Co.'s Celol rated s CE,,ERRiIiTED CiAMBRINN I,Oci- ST .:,lol,.,:i'f.AiN S.A.IIITEI., BALL, WHOLUi7Er E .I.ND ItEIAIL ~ . • B.lll.riperr. land .Dealerli' In - ~ i , . . LUMBER DEALER, r . .1' LANK.R / D r C 0A L ' . . -, , , • ' d o . ,,kx_ 11,. . . ) 2114 IValattt rzt., Philo, - elphta, . -"' C-OA.L .• • .. • • - ii , . .oOle e IDS? alma s..tieet, Phibulellahia. . C0r.1.1. ST.. mar RA,ILROA 1 1 DEPOT, m , • POTTSVILLE, PA: .- :, Ofilees :'. :st T,ioil, I:flihi.nzr, ew • York, . ' ..r ' • Janet, '76 ,- 1 , . . : 23-1 v ' . , ' • . L N‘ 11l keep eonstantly 1 • m 1 toomne st., 1101144,11.. . .210 LI: A titN7li itin G. W. ' fixtsgars WELL KNOWN' .., ,:t . • 1 .1 . k,, - 0.,...,,!.,- ~I ,_ -.On hand a full assert- Fet.l9, '7O :" - - ' - . _, _..,•••• • . mint of /luilding Lulu __ . .. 1.‘..r. • . PINE FOREST - COAL •• - •- . 1 ' 2 iliscelliincous. , :. • - ... . .„, „, her, which he will gum- CASZNER, ' 3TICKVEY . & W LINGTON) .• , 7 ________ _.:_-- ,i__ .z. _ _÷__,_______,,___. __ _.. _ , __:-_.__ .:._ ;,..'....Siiik;X,_;46 antes to sell at the ZIG Wai...itt• - r St:, -' - I 64 TRINTrr Emma:into, S TRAW RIDGE it CrtOTHTER. • - ' 13 ://i i' lill' , . LOWETsT MARKET Mihers. and Shippers of Coal. ••• PIIII.AILt. Nsw pion*. " • 1 I\ . . • ~,•••,.` RATES. . . 14 0 ' . ••• 4 * ;I's / ;,:dC . P :i. • , nI:ILNSTDE : from their Ilarnsitict Col. shamokin. LOllll4 SNYDER. C. B. HHORMAKER. '"- I . i; i " ..,-,- ... 2.- - s. -4, Ikaws, Sash, Illit.ds, ,Inm. LEW Is VEIN ilted Ash.) • Jan I, 70 ' 1-ly D "RS IS 1 - 1 - 0 . 0b S -.- •i i -..-- ...• " ....,.. ' Fxlo Rash at :10 em.ts per d • i ~. - , .I,I,II:UST .11.".UNTAIN (While ssli.l - 1 ~' . _Sept i0.'74-11 - • ' 17: . -tt ..„ (1,30 Trinity Building. New ark. . :.,.. Pier No; 1S Part Itichmoitd. ! - OUR SIE(XIND,OPENESiti - • r'-FOREIGN DRESS . oftfe s e .' 203 Wtanut Street. Phitad . pun. 67. - .01014: a: REPPLIED, .W. P. GOSIDOX, 11. FARRIC:S embraees. nianyl new and seasohsueable •----;-- , .m. _, ( 20 Dotson %teem, Boston. . . . goods not Y t exhibited bytpay ot lima" hotter:, i ' NI ILLERS B URG STEAM' SAW • . 'yi GABE No. Sl, POItT ItICIINIOND PHILA. . •• I. I, '7 , 1. . - I The Very Low Prices i't. ela v 0 be , V asklret for Our •i 1 . •1 •P !earlier and present hirelings ' , much Lacer titan last AND P,LANIN'.:I I ILLS. N. C. -..- ERECIN7::& .C. ,- ..) , . ... , .. _ 3 .. l'ier 7, Port Itiel 1.. - ' ' . , MINERS AND SIIIRPERS Or' year, notwithstanding thelivar.: have induced large . . and mpid sale, i ~ „ RA NnVIETT, NEILL •& CO 7 ... .._. •,' Locust Mountain, Mammoth Vein, Red. Ash, Although, oar i tape:tat I.4'is have 1... m .11 a touch larger Kale than ever Imelmre, we already tied flou r mast" I'ACi•t•It.EXS AND DEALER,* IN ' I .... ' • • -4; •:, . . Lorberry, and --.. : stock rapidly diniinishingfore the aetive .I.maand • . • shipiwr , ;()TAittliritelLe 8;. Ilimniinous , .. , , - •:...- thrill early made tipan it. I -- ' ' 'l. i . .-r •• •-•-.1. :' -,-,:,-,-;'-'-' :,"?-;.--.;-:-.- .-.- -- -:. • '.. i , . Among tt e mast endless variety of'Frec im Ger- TOWER CITY, LYKENS VALLEY COALS .• ' .../ ~-4 9 1 -. 4 , Th 3 ff ._ 47 . ) •, 4 ,-, : . 4 t.-.. ....- = _ , ' C 4C) _Ai- I. . . 1 Man and B tiala fitzes, mu woial metithin unusti -4.: e 1F... h A' E — :k71 4 7 - 410." - C-c - F-'Thf-T • • • . (329 Walnut Street, Philadelphia. '‘ ally heattlitil styles:6i 1 ... • . . .. 4:Miceli: -, 11l Broadway, (Room No. 2) New York. " " ,- I 'i, • 1 . ' . , - - " t 1" ." - _ - < ,7 7-" - -- 7 1•1- - •-r . .., -- -6 , -r-,17 — ,,r -- -.F • ...n . , 6 I•:'. r,t r., r the Kai. , of the eel, bladed StiIENAN- k 27 Doane street, (Room No, Boston. TONG T. PO / PLIN.:, , 1.. • _ 1,. tit : 'IT)", N . ." 1.10 A N i.... TRIEBEL's I,m•usdAtottn- march 2e, 70 ' . la. 'RICH CLOTII .I , l.Alkis, • . ... • , • . i4l.iii .11.1 Cu rirftitil . SIM /Ma; ili - ,--_.-.- , •er i. 1 • . t . r . 111 kiu'l , of Bill 171.4'..Yr.Cat to 0 facr. . Pier 14, South. SATI N I..tINI , ...F(I)t . 'SVITS, ' , . . • NVI lit 0 Ash C,'",):t.l/ . - rr,i,,,,,.. Lumber, lloArd.,„ Plank, .I.ath, Stripping, SILT', W 6 : 1 1'„;.I.N)CO/iDED l'ill'F,lNs, , "Shing,les. Flouring, I st d l i . n li z ng, issnih. Imoots. . -- • j • - 'Also, SPOIL PEA.CiI 7.I.IIiNTA IN BORDA KELLER-& NUTTING 1 . 1 .. • ',.:-.. - 11. 'EI A.- 4 11 CO:11.• Miners and Shippers of - Coal, _ IA a 1 Ntep• ! 41 / 1 1,1C5,. 171.1 1%111 Lit/I'4llr . _ All kinds of Mattufarturing Lumber, cohstantiy . . • - •• CV E.ST LEIII.OII GREENWOOD, .„. LOW AN6 MED I UM-PR CED DRESS GOODS, on hand. .Bite Pine, Henalovit and Mak lioar. Is cut any' FROM HOBOKEN, . TA I.LA,Q,UA. SHAFT, 'Flu: 1.41 varietten of Lehigh, and Boylan's C'ELE- III:EVENDALE, . . ' I length. Our Mills bre 70 mires below Wllliamsm,rt., BRATED FA:1111.Y roA 1.. ECKERT'LORREZRY, - . Adapted to he wail!. of I ii' most critioal its well am. ring.a.savlng of F 2 ri , Bright "per 10.4 fect. anises . -. ~. ~,, , NORTH. FRANKLIN RED ASIT, , • filled 'promptly. Price list furnished on applieanat. • - --- the most ce. noidi eel buye - . 'July 9, '7O -- Zs-tam{ .... . , • .1!no, S,:tle .I.t.tent: in the E.mstern naftket for the • , • • Br.AGic HEATH, . . Attie:die :Intl 4; •••••g••'.l 0 : ..1.1: (T;').:•4 celebrated BITE- - -BIG RUN lA/CETST 'MT., ' . . . - ' . , .r . 5115 w...-:, c0.u... —— -- ----f . K 'S!.I.,KS. . ~ . 1 42. 1 „. 2 ' Kilby St., Boston. , ~ - 4 - . .. • . Public Salc.s.. - , ~. --• • f PhilaJelohL , , 2 ."7 Walnut Street, Offices : • Mom 64 Trinity Bultdl , nj. N. Y.' - ' In our a. v. , 1 - 1 ~sent Of 'iti.Al*K :411.1:,4 some ' . . 0111,,. . , „ s;e. w York, 1t.....1 ft. Trinity Building, .) 327 Walnut, Street, PI it telphla. . time satire, .... V 4, a lint tt( very Inv: prietni. at Whh•li 1 Detol.l.rnee, '27 thtntont !benne Street, . -;.;'-- 'mimic SALF.-A Fiddle Sale will is• liel.r:it • • • prits.s we sliall eiontlntie to!sell them tor two w. eke . the residimce of the subseriber In the Township ‘ l . Bostn, 2.1 Ilona., street. . . ?ler IL • 4-- • „ , longer not wil t I. land tog t li , getwinl advanee. of West Penn, Schuylkill County, , - I'. la uary 22 'an 801t0 - ..i. KELLER & NIITTI-NO. .. . ~ . We have ii nee , ndled to ur stoek; fm.N . ill F.: 2 : 2d , Del Y OF 1 ) 1 1'0.B.P:1?, 1 , 70 l'ier No. 9, PO.l L r Itil711111011.3: • NoItTII• FRANKLIN WHITE Asti. ; • • • 1 • 0 . 17- '. iz i ' , A Safe to eommettee at LI o'clock, „V. M., consisting Of JOHN. ,R. WHITE & SON, • ''''' ' ''''). • . - OHENEY . ROS.' AMErsiCAN BLACK GROS ; . .., . . . the followini ' describeti personal' Id - avert y. viz: 7 - 6RAIN AT SI 90. Household goods, kitchen furniture, live 'valuable = - •• _ Shippers of Coal, . , - . i t 1 . . tine driving horses; eows, five different kind °twee.- , neW Ijorki •••• , - on., four sleds, one threshing machitie told power, No. 316 'WALNUT ST., PHILADELP;IIA. saitic,,,••.lal. an /Ire otr.r., A..; oar Conip!iitors fix wlndthill st raw - cutter, eorn.sheLler of the latest I in .,. • very elleait It n'..t • - provement. one drill. one liarrow.''one cultivator, Osputs for Stu Itlll gale et Vaal : • • we. ter.i•sti r srurrri:l. Jolt:l'D. ur..Dt.i.k:ssurrEL. , , ...several sets of harness, and all kind of ham , , SI - 1 -1 . Nk • I.s _A I N; Li s uv.i.,..c, • No. NI 1 We.l Thirteenth: Strert, Neve York. . log ntf • meals too tinmennus to mention. Terms and I . ~t .1ii ,, ..1, t , :.1 . . .nis Mode known at the time and piaci. 01 N.t. Ito 2. Third Ave .. New lurk, WM HEISSENBUTTEL &ta .. •, . h.... ISliairf;' No. 99, linlin Ntreet. Pro% Ittettee... ,-p • . We V.' ....reatly ell hir4„, -11.1?...11.kiVL DEPAILT, AN DREw iliwyr.s. b'ulba'r • Mittel; Mt. .Avn.d.iinwton Avelino , . near , • Shippers and Wholesale pealera In NieNT, and moldi-I t liet et el-r .. -•'• -., - Sept 21,!70--41 - . . `I ederat Street, Boston, • •-• DoALIc BALE - - Schuylkill; s . Lehigh :and.. Cumberland . - RE., - Dy..m..ii.i.: -5u11n . .4. AND NV.A'l'l - .1:- FRANKLIN COAL OF LYKT , ‘NS VALLEY. I , OF A. VALUABLE MILL PROPERTY 1 . • hi:.‘LERN ARE I'ArTI6N.I.:II that there are - (2 , 0 -A. .L.. . ..-• - • Pltf.)(if• c ,0.k1Z.:. ~ IN JACKSON TOWNS/lIP, I.EIIA.NON COUNTY. ...1 tour C.Alieries which mine this t', t it; all of r . - 9 • , ,• , A 5P.1.1...‘t DID - OPPutt-TUNITY ! Will Lt sold at kit, ~. Welt :ire under the inzement ..f theenel.e sign- : , . . ~ . We irei l :in imjnet se.' im5.......ri d,eat..f ~. ,- .1 .. 1 .•,,, th ,. y,.. ar r,..;,,siss l ,..ic sos , .. t ,•,,.. , L. ,r m i ll,. _ TLIN I rl. EL 11. DING, 111 BROADWAY, Itoom SI, ~ lie %111.% on .' 1., O. Box .5019. LEA} Y.ORK. • - . . : 1 ' .. • ie1i.1,1,.., will he the only Agent; for Its sale in New for --'-• ."-• - Bltta_liE S 1 AI.V.I.S.,'SINGLE di In .I,7IiLE. . • s.kTI - RDA.\: °GT( W , I.:R -- 'l., 1t.70. I': ii' New r" , !:: New Jersey. and south of Cape sole A,,...-nts fur New York and Vicinity f the r . , , ii elirr, anti I L', 1.1. Ititt es a & co., lil Itairnitore tor all s,‘l.- 0f..1.1.:1 - : . .til.t."iNT et. I 'O.'S, MANX RIDGE, and .., ~. BLASI:4:T SIiA.iVI.I. I J SING LE ..t. lootirti,E. I 1 up ea the premise's; about tw i n miles east of Myers , tither points. t iiir ..kgelil2... Will deal io .......ther I.- ql ill A .%!',,iii. ItreENlZElt's TERRE t RCN C0AL.,4,. - ." I town, one and fa-half miles went o (lttonehsbilrlt, anti a hat eN. ,n - . and in. t tit...win:Cour the hut, aenutite , arli.' ~,,,,,,,i, tsl . •7 0 :•• . 1.3-ly lkimd 1:11 the Isi cst styles of • one-half toile north of Richland:la station on the , ..i.• in•ms: prsen.,- it oft hci... Tiken`e.,t of t I,1; ea uti , dt - - • , .r i . Lehation Valley Minns:id:: adjoining the Futon ea .. is, siMply to eiedd.• those Int.:tested. to Loy under- DAVI D SO N , A YOUNG 4'14 CO.. . • ‘ 4 hal, Reeks and DatiphimTurnpike, and putilie meal standiziv. .11. NC Y . 1 - 1.1.W.1.,,,;.• leading to lilehliind S.'tation, the (9110W11.1g 't ahlUble • ri., Azents n0..1 It ei a... , lntatits for the tilt a irt et . ' 1- . WISOI.F.S?•.I.E DEa 3. /..• r_s ry , . , - 1:.• - ,1 Estate. viz: - "-- .m.•..nts. are as f.. 11, w-: SINN it Es. i,N a: C..., tieuer.4l. : Our , mits and honks will - he wade up in ouroa n 'I lie PI operty formerly- known its " Lelathaeles ,t4.•.:t., 111 Weilllnt .11 , •••i 1'11th...1 , 11011a; tin ii Neav• 1. 4, ri - ST Mi)UNTAIN SIIAMvKIN, LE111611:" • .- , "ddr.l.lll r. tinder tin p rsenal set,ervishm., Mill,".- conslstlug of it Grist 111111 with l'utent Wal.•r 'i ork ;sill's!. Is a: Ito.iiii Is. Triolty Builditers, J. is. i":,` ,ccmitEltl..‘,Nli,"sultAsios 4-, w.ii,KEsBA-ftity, • ' •" ....- NV heela Iltn.at water power in the Stitt... and capable 10 oti,y, Ageni ; ii..e.:..n.teil by 1.:1.1s:11„ . 1 MI 1 :: ' !"..1,1-:Y. • . .. . ... - Tit.iWilli 1 :; E A - . el.(iTIIII:li; . of I ' i urnishlng riJO harwls weekly, having u gooe cus. . -+, . 0t..1.,.: sOntlner 141'1,1, R.I.:1011. .• • •• --&_ •••- , •, - 1 . . . ..., ..' I .t I an, and ~ .Itnate in one of the best l:,' rain "pttultiriug it \ I.!, ItIO/I'llEttrt ..1:. CO., t ienera I ...%,.14.•01'n, 5 /•;;.:or - - •,' C./ 0 A. 1.1 S. • .V. 11'. f :•, :, r j1:,../kth /I, ' 3b 1 ,1 , 1, ,C (... N 171144/ \N,CI L.,ns c , r the State, ...insisting of - 1 . . , ,-;1 .• :,‘ e•litl4' Mill ililuri., Md.; 1•01,1,,111,1 :t1 113 i - • • • ' • " . t.:,, Pa.: I.y If 1 !.'•1•:1'1; A.;.. ,••• - cf•:E.LtETT., or.leri • Re.) , ),,m Ne. • ,e.::::HIN'ITI• sr 11.1AING, NEW YORK. .•••'''''•.'• "' • : • -1,..: lii • -.- :V) tel 01. • LIAII.sTONE LAND, :..: , 1,,, riven 1,, el t her,a the above !inn"! Part lem, ,„'y'.70.,,i..:),‘,vi-osoN, fw•ineri..-,..T Tyler SI Co . ,' 1 . --- ' - - . • t- --. .. . h:, I ion. ,o,e else. WM. B. I 'elIV LE, General Maineter SANG I, IC y, it , 7 , .; (3, formerly of s eahlw el I, Gordon .t. Co ( RAN D, V:XPOSIT 10 - ' in tm Illeli sitate of cultivation, Including a Limestone ":•1 h.: :se ion. i t linoich it. t...'.,. the Shoi Mt.. Coal. It: rni•Acr K. IMO,: MA N. ' '..1 • 1 . '4 , 11,11.1E FA. HIONABLE iVORLIM. 141:a.rry, enatalatni; superior Llmestone. The land ~ and the Lyk.•os Xall,•y - t 'oat t'n. ~Lan, I, ",n---1. Jan 1"... '7O . •:- .. • a-ly . Is under i. v i fetiees, and the other improvements (•1/11P1. --- "'".., OP A f.S.: NI. A. Ill?.. :: • , lisist. . v -line two and half story Limestone Fier NO. 11l Port Itieluutunt. ', ' - ' ' • Inve!litu., burr, with a „Sweitzer lien.. hlllO/41. ' • )T., JOHNSON At neinokEN.•. - .. No. 1101 N. il -. •••stunt4l House, mind other necessary improvements; alms, a SINNICKSON &, CO., .1 ~ -- . I'A ti I;`,N -.. l'iip n .Well of Wat in th e ere y , . Ca:kim. m and • • - '"I - . , . .. . - .....se the , 4, - ner 11,- . - - ~,,I,- AK,I,r,, r,,,• The Sale and Shipinent of the , - —...ineAsaard. - . , "Franklin Coal of Lykens Valley," VAN WIC Tk'TR & STOUT ..,,,rous •to view 'the aforesaid prernist., __ .. om,,,,please call on III(! undersigned". . ±. - .rarislan l'usses:sion and a good title given on the Ist day of ' . ' •• -• • -•- .• wrs. zits AND EIIfIPPERS OF THE '4, N.- , England, New York'. NeW Jersey and South • . . . ' s of Cape 11,11ry. ' Celebrated "Fulton" 41C"Stour ( ehigh) Coals, ,-, w,ri.n: ,if you want A p r il , ........g. well-imule snit.; at short no- Aar Male io commence at I eeloek, P. M., when • • • enudit ions! will be made known by'. .-" • - as. BINDERS for tasteful tritnatings and . Se p • GORGE Z. 7.II3ESIEFiNf,t N, f . cut . : Walnut Street, Pltilatl,lplllta. Front the Ehervale. and the Stout Collieries, near Iths. Mouraing,.Travollog told Wis'mting • othees : ..- o,l' Trinity Building, Near York.' • . Jl:tzleton, Pa.. ik-livere(l direct from amities on kilo g and Frincy.C.sstinnes. .. J.a.•kson T.xmenship, t." ; 21, 'Tit-n : l9-41 , - - ~. ~ I • i . 32 Nominee Ntreet, ilotiton. ' - ho t unl Venanels - at PT. JOItIISOY, HOBOKEN, and NEW tt,a4t TRINIMENGS; EFTTaNs, ORNA,II.-,:cls __ •_____ , . JOl4l - IPTI G.- ]loopy. ...,:gent, ltur.N.itr.tett" N. J. . . : . Pr 'salt nub eu . q2,ct.' • 1 i .. e latent Pays inoveltren la black and •• . - - ' . 1.,n. 1,. ° 70-1- '• :" , .P. 0.,1102 Was_ New York.. ' (43 &46 'Trinity Bnlitlfngy - . im •es.' Gimps.f Itliehes, I..s,ps, Flowers:, : . ...,,. , •• _ .. __... Ottlas: II I itroadway; New York.: ,-' 141-V, • ,rentlmm.."Veos. Ili hbonS, new shades ..._"______...___ - , ____7l_7.--i. WALTER DONALDSON & CO., - '''_.• tiTe , mw,..16.,,fi5., tunoniry at 119 Broudway.l . . al- Malin and Talretaitilmhons, Ziateeies. Neck- _____i _._ - . , .• M I .N;l4.•••.\]n till I 1 . 1•T:IGS ,01 7 , • N1'111'1'11: 12E:13 AP4I-1 • C .? • AtiIENTS fox.the'Ceitil,rate:l ' THO 4 A$ LEHIGH " COAL. 1 2.5 \ „ i ., 111.itt Street, Plallulelphla. -' rinlty 'llllll,llng. New :York.. 1 if, Doane .I fret , Itouton. • W II A ILF—Pier II Port liaelimoncl: 9-11 . 7 7,1 f ti MA4 j'A IN. MORN t, II ArK rat. JE.tiS K m.eoOte. GAIN, HACKER &. COOK. ~njJJ7•cI:.Y o? MoI:NTA',IN, 131.. CK .11L 1 , 1:A1.1:10s,1); On( EH Flumi QUA LITIF-S.OF • :1114.1 It(q1 .A 1t CO:11S, No-j:l4. Waindtj 4 treet,l'ldladel . plily, and Wood land AVltarvel, .14111 N 1% STRYKER, _ •b1111 . 1•El: AND AGENT, Port Riettitko.ol. LOVE,.:.BOYER & 'CO., sIIfYI , F,R.4 op Anthracite and Bituminous Coals =OM . .. . • • ' t ' M I:ER 1...‘ NI) VEIN 11/Tl5 M INI A'S ( . 1 PA 1 '• (33.8 Walnut St., Philadelphia. 11.41••+, - 13 Datum' %t.. 114),C0n. • d 1 27 Culls:. ddddd lIMIse St., rrOildetler. 111,r._ h .", 70 ' _..• -i- lb-ly,, - . . •- • Pier 13 Norlh Port ittriind. 4OEEN: SCOTT & SONS, - Miners and Shipperi. of Coal. 01. r. AGENTS FOIL TILE MALE Or 1..P1.14):1LE, LOCUST 310UNTAIN A;lt. • ;11, "OEN ritAISH - Ltin Deep Red Ash. !hr• sftrhe yeti's and slmllar 'tat rx..spo.cts to the I,l"Kl.',:iti YALLE'V.CottI. ". .• I'ItNNK GOWEN SHAMOK/* Reel 3.41. t- I`I4IILADELPHIA—No. 2241 Waluut. St. ~110STON- \o. 19 Donne St." COME I YIKIVICORIK-11111r4nnitray. elmnilter 141n 5.7 French, Agrlltll. Jan I;. 70 . DAY, HUDDEL L . ,& CO., Miners & Shippers of Coal: 12031.:' Walnut SC:. Philadelphia. ~.' -.-' • , :.• • bi:11 e•: • I I. I 1 rals.tway.lTrinltyl?ttil.llnglN. V. ~. l 7 Imaine Street. rioston. ~. ~.. .' ...gents for the.: sale or:the I'l4l'oa - 111g eelebransl :, .. CoaN: 1..,.. IL\ ltl.l.lffai. I.E111(4i I f:t JA{, .. II! , ' t , MY IltA.f. U.S HK. ICOILI,AN Et DI:APEtt . IN t A LS:And Ole . ' o ENt:El...tlMt CIL\ I 4 4 :4)...S SHAMOKIN •COA )AL- • f ttn , ~,,, , ,,n . ; .- A v ii A Rv v....1 ;s 5 Pier. No. IS Pt. itlehntond.. Ja i l. 1, '741 ( Piet . No.:: Eza liladhp'f l- :St}N • . .-_ - . . Pier 1 Von Richmond. JOHN. ROMMEt, JR., & BROTHER, • • • . BOLE AG8.78 YOB, 7:0. Favorite sail well knOwn'Hll.l.& U IRillK . 11 - bite Ask he superior DENIlir .11.1.. LY. balky free-burolug Pink 'llll. er..eloraterj DANIEL WEBSTER Dw.•h nod 1111011, TOP SEMI.I4TIIIIINOPK. kA YEN'S WiNG , LEHIGH at. Ell*batlapoit ::()5 1 ,4 Walnut St., Plitlaths. zt Itoartir Strirot, Ittrtinn. Room 5:1, Trinity ttnildlng, New York. J . ILA L. A GENr 2- 45A,..i EL - F, /LC( 11,, , N11.1 ' 1 !! )W.N E. P. IrPII.M.tt. Marti MEE VAN DUSEN BROTHER & CO., Milner. and Shipper, of C 0 ALS. . . oikuvaii)**l4.l.tlgh..tdravit Mountain, Loeuxt Gap, IVllktsbarre, Lebigk; azd othrr • ' - WHITE AND -k RED ASH • COALS. • 1.1.1 - : 4l oAuy;rs:- F.llwitu ryo ntrt, I Jerspy (Irv. (2 1 11,VaInni 'Street, Plifludelphta, 111.1trotulway, New York 5 IN:Kine t / 1.0 ra IMMO DOVEY & ' KEI3D~RIOK, urn 414 Sli100;1... of the. Celebrated Shaft or Rainbow ; and Keystone COA_ES. fTip-art No. .1.1 Port Clanlowl: 11' hiladelohla-22/1 Dock Street.' , otne.. . 1 Pottiorillo—Ceotretreett. •• , Roston—No. 17 Donau /11., 411 *- 31 . W m " I rebraury Wastdsticto o, 24. Va ' 1 . . . . . - . . . ' •• - M • ''. , - • , . . . . . . . . . : . - • • . . • • .., . . . . I . . • . - - I - , . . , • . . . . .•- _ . .. . • . . • , • . ' . ... ' . . , • , • . : . • •,°, 4 ,,. I . '• , - . . . . • ' ' . , . , . . , •". . . • . . .„ .! . . . • ' . ~ - • - . . i . , . . - , . • , . . . . . - • ,' • .. , ~ , , . ' • • - .` • . , ..,.. I ,_, • . • ~ • • • : '. . ' . • . , . . • . . . . . • . . , 1 , . . . • . . . .•, . . , . • . . • .. , ' • • , , .. ~ . •I . ..... ..1 . . • . . . . . . . • ~ ' v • . t - -••• ... . . • . . . - , 1 - •- •-•_4'.. - _ - _— ,, ,,--•-. a. - - - - . . . , • . • - , .L., , . - , . •i , -, . - L , !._. ....„ i. , r -, : , _, . .' L . • ...- • -- 2..---.''''`. 7'--7 ------. 7-: —7: ;40 4 ..- - - •.=qpi' tr- .'. -- - , ' .',..--- :•:F - --- - --- '-'- - - : , . . . I . ' ,• ' •Lt - ..- ti'e- - .. : . , : -,:. , . - --",=-:•=:. -27- --,--- .. •,•• ---------,-•••- , •i----__., • .. . ...._ - .. . . • . . . . .• • I'. . ~ ... ~,,,. - . ~, • • . i -•1 1- :-..-,_ -__-_---..- .. - 4;_ - :_g- -- --e7.7-'7,...: -. • - --. -:-- -. • -:. j, C :..z . 's if ' --- -•--- . i , : • . . •. , e , . • . \;!. ..., :," Nib, " . "7 ='. ..46_,1r , - --.. M . .,, t....... • . . . . . ' ' .... . .. f zry . I I %•;,-; Igi . . . • - . - ••,•! ••,•! -,, ' _ ', • • • ' : . . . • . ! . ! . . , . • • -.. - , 4i• l4( '''' ..''' • 1 . ...N. , •.• ' :. - : ... . , -_.. . • . .•. . . : •, , i i • . • ! '• • • ... • - 1 . - • ' . -. •-1 5 - 7.-71,? 11 * -,' - , . '..! ..- ''.,.° • 4'7.; ~ • • :,. . . . . .... [ . , .' V.: • • c' „... N V, P. l ' •- . ••• • . :.Z....t :,-1' : • _ . 7,r7-'. . - .. • xr , ,_. _.•,. ~ - .i• . i ... - ; . . . . . ; 1 4 '.;• ~' :i. •.: . • . I • ' .: , .. .. - 1 - 1 .. ' : ''. - - ' '''--:: . . . i .. - - . - 1 : au c-'.L- ........, -••• k .. vi 1fv:....i„ . r . ...e . 4 . . ..... 'l4lr a , • ,.., ,f: i; ' 4 . :s .:.k ;.:\ t vp He,) ,,• ,. ‘,. . .'..-...:, rs: . - ' 1 I tIr. : :"1. 1 :7 0- . 1.! ~. ,• f ..*; ~, • ,' .... • -- . $2..;!!;.,,-...'....iisnldZai ; : • k .'' 7 111 114‘ 61 ,; .4 " . " -. ~...4 ,.. 14 :: •• - ::,...A. : ` K 1... .• .- .. , ..111 , !,, , :mi ~- - d - :... • ' ' • ' • .-, r . ~• - . • . • . :, . . .. ; 7" I r! I •. ' . - : .. .i • •• •. , . .. . . . ~• . • 'l' .- ' . i .!. : • .-I . • , • -. .. . .- - „ . , : - : ' i • • ' . ...- •` ' , - ...f.„.....,...... 'l. . ------. • I r a-tosliem . . :1,16 .... •., . " 4 , ..• 1 -- • - _..i....H . . . . . . , , ' • ~...• --••,-, -, ..-47......--•.,....: , ,, ,,iiii -7- 77: r: A. , : - - ./47-': - .-7:-';'z - ' • :: .: •* - z..-.---r,:'' . • • . . r . ... • .....- , ~. dp , ......-.--_ "•• - , lar.o' • . . . .. . q ... • . . , ~ - • 1.1 ‘,• -.--- •, 4 1 #7.....5pi•,, .-yi. •-•:',, ‘. ' -... 14 -- " '-. - . , t- 1 • • • • - • . - . . -. .. --.. ' ' ' • - 'k' .- . .• • . .. . , ,• . '.: .. -..::,-.., -..---, : -`• ---,,5•:. • ---••• , . . . . .. : • , - , , .• • - • -•!-- ....00- , =-- • • .. '. . • . • . . . .. , . , . .. . . . , -.•.- .‘..5.,..-i., . :.-_ :. • ~... _ LT . . I._ - ~..t.--, • - f7 . . * r.7--_ • , 47.1- 1,3 ) ,--.-. . . . .. , - . ,„ - • • . . ._ ,: . ...',. ~ --- 1 -- : . ...' ' . •_-,, .. _ -,....,... a .... 1 ,-,.....-........-- ~ ----___.— . ... J 1 .., „,,, s e" -... .k .;••••..„` ~_ -,--••.--"- " -',-- • . . . • . . .- - • L . • - ; ~ ..,. . . . 1,. . 1 • fitatesed sit:carding te..441. of Centistecist the . . . r e " lira, Ur - 11 4 3 -ZUMI 4t 'Wl:telly la the Risk . " Ofllce of the Vstrlcs Coast bf the Irnited inetes Ihrthe Eriiere Illetrkt of PentecieStala. ' . • - • - _ . ;., • Jnn KEN . I.I4II!!L —Usury Joao•, Aigen t CALDW ELL, CONANT' 4: - WES,. TON, • ,NO. NEOADiIy AY, NEW YOBS. Aitomnes '3 . 5 and - 36 Trinity Minding.) ' • • WIIOI.ES, ALE DEALERS , LEIS Kai,' WILKESBAHHE; . lITTSTON, ItED ASH,. • • • ,NIAIIANOV, . • LOCUST MOUNTAIN, CUMBEIILANI); Into:k1) Tot'. ETC., • • :1 % . • 0 _LT / V.' S the !NO LEI(IGhI COAT.: WE PRIMROSE, THE I'o.WF:UroN genii-hlturninoux. awl ottior flrxt-r!ite „IA ME...;.W(CA (.: wk.•-vrtc. April 3. '6O „ • -;11 OFFICE OF. THE.NIAGARA ELEVAT: c().„S CONLILLIMCIAL Bur PALO, N. Y. COAL COAL THE NIAGARA ELEVATING CO,' hailng a large gumbo; of hot a n d Dockage, will he prepared at t beopening of navigation tfi receive from the I , ;rie Railway, Canal, or Lake, any quantity of COAL for atorage'or tratvatifenent to any place First by Copal or wele by tile.takes,upiin as favorable ternlA ft any plertlex In Buffalo. Their lot is well. located for a general city' baainexa. • - , 7 CYRUS CLARKE, ViceLl"readdent. llfbrell 27, 'VI ItTtf (Eountli. JAMES ..T. C O - N N 111 minpr,ana.rmtpperör the Celebrated ' LOCUSf MOUNTAIN COAL • _ Parrsv 11,LE, SCHUYLKILL CO., PA. Jan' 1 ; '7O. , 1. Witutingtou, OFFICE OE THE 1 1, 1 - 00/LHAQUE—freO'AL COMPANY; and WI W. Front tit.. • F.ti GT(IN; I)ELAWXRF.... • - • are.nciw 4 , 6T:we1l it) Turn WA .tliejtrtwir, ikal ws:aut '0rt•4:11h4.1%.4 with our- • , , Celebrated Coul,: the • " - Motaaaque,..", And tt,.. n) intere,ted wto find it' to their advantage and economy to vontailt 'tit emit patty bt•foremaklttg their yenarly contract.% or engaging cargoes. • Shipping point for the Western'tnark et, Erie. - " Southern ilo .11avre de (;race, ' 4 • " 1.:11444-m -do Wilmington. N-. the Clover 11411 nail Pend and lilac tit I n nous Coal Co.'s (;ants, for tlit!;:3 - nateliftultire' of gam, Ili eantlllex 475 yield}; bake flr,at quality and percentage of at.h smelt. ; May 11 , f7421-1y .-• gorintrii greek. Lo V EAST FRANKLIN' RBERRY. UN CO AL. 1\ f Y EAST FRANKLIN LORBERRY COAL .111. Is now sold exclusively by Hamm REPPLIER, DORN 01-etz CO.. who art my mole Agents, Parties ar&ri nLI Irato Ahem mar always 'depend upon get as* Dg . u a pure aritule.- (No. MN Walnut S hllallelphla.' OFFICES: :Nu. 111 Brolulw Won/ 3, New York. - 1. No. D 1 Duane gime, Nonni Si Boston. . Jan I,'&-1- •• . - . - HENRY HKIL. Dunito SALE POa.LHAELE HOTEL P PROPERTY INTSVILLE. PENNA. ' Pubmant to nn outer. of the Conn of Common Plea.; of ttebuylktll County, the undersigned fXorn- In Woe of the estate of JOIiN'GRDSSANti, will offer at Public Sale, on the prefn hie% on . SATU RDAY, NOVEMIIV,D. 511 i, at to (i'eloelc, A. 31,..a11 that (*titan jot or ilet o of gnAtud,hltuuto °Write corner`of Rai 1t0134a and Union gtreets, in Potuiville. Penna., having It front on ruti,ii street of 1.14 feet It Inches. and bounded on the easterly elide by Coal street, and on the westerly side by Railroad street.—together %TM' the Improve nien' s. consisting of a now three-Story Brie k Hotel Itu tiding. with a two-story brick side building thereto attached, and , a. ime-story front!, kitchen , MAO al %Jolted thereto. Thia-IfOTEL being opposite the . Premienger and.. Freight Ilepotantt tut !tending Railroad, Is one of the best let.nted business stands hi _ this part of the Slate. ntul being but lately erected, is in good condi .tiun. The ternts are 1/3 follows:, la per tent..ftsit- on the day of sale. 15Ter cent:on., confirmation of sale and dell very: of deed. '2l per cent. on the grin of April, 1874 when priawsottoo, of the premises will be delivered to the purchar. 25 per cent.-witli ittterest, on-April 1, 14'4. 7b per e , ertt, with interest, on April 1; ' • A rAt.II purchaser will reeelve wilberal (11seandl.. . - A. W. SCHALL;K: 'Committee, &e. Pottsville, Pa., Act 1. '7O-410-5t • A NEVV' fiKELF.-OLLING • 04.8, WZW.I for 11 INKS do. made at. the - rk• - JALAPPA. FOUNDRY, By .800;EN & • BROS., Sole Manntacturers.,r' Ale°, all'ktride of Costinvi; Bo Ildlng Hard' w l eze„.. de I.eave orders with - K. iinTON• 7 _ . • • No.'t Nceirettan: . , /day 28,'b 22-414.: 3,l":',NT:s (Ii .A . t1:31. A. ITINI)E s Iit. i •_. r. - car. Eleven! I& .Chestnutits., PL Ha ... }oil 111 F. F. 4.1. 'AN li NV IN:11.1r.- pr 1670, • Wholesale n A Itelaii, -- srlileli P.‘ri.; md the tir4A n nnufnetoti,,, s upply . . Dresses. Id nitres, Cloaks: lid ~ ..;sk,tutries for Ladles, and Children. : A special :partaztent of . plain and elegantty trimmed pattern , of the latest -Parisian and ILagilst .tityles, at ' it - per dozen:, If you want a handsome y-tit tins. well made snit.; at short no tice, o. hM i •s. H E INDR'S to tasteful trituntinars and 1 . dainty !..1 It Ci IF'S. 3touriLing,. la-voting' and Weeding out Alts, Walk / Aug and Ilthey. C , ;stutoes. ' .. .. IttiEss d C1.1,,th: TRIMMI N G I: rr-rt ) ::.;54 ORNANEN-rs .7- i cotnprisingle latest Pays Inoveltle, In blael: and - colonel Frib •es.' GitupsY Ityches, Loops, Flowers, _01.1,,,,, Itrid4l-Wrezttlim. - Vetls. Itibbons, new shades In Velvet, Satin and Tallfetaf t llibbons, Sast....rs, Neck - ,1 leS. I'..11)1.: Ile !Act; (;oons-t (l it.tN ii Duch ESSE LACE Fog Ditt , ...s.sTnimAt INC% , Voir 1 e AptillquegiVolenelen. nes, Hamburg Edgings and Insertions, )jtlack Gulp. ore and Thrciad I l nees,:riew n design -end holder:tie In pryer. Ulicticri 1N1104.1%* OnNA3IE:cTs, Fans, Birds, Maim, ruslil--tos, 31oueli.oirs.floses and Fancy Goods. selected by - Mrs. flintier at .•Inciira. - Elegant line of Whitby Jet .Goods, In seta Itie.ast.pins, Earrings, ...Ceeklaces mid ftracelets.: $ ilendtd littii! of French .tet ,Goods. C'oral, and Frente,lviGolil st.te.,channx, "s i Sleeve linttons, Chains, de.. %•hiel.t for itriee or varies ty In Style, entinilt - he iturpitaced. Strantreravisning our city are respectfully to vited to exatnlne.. c Iw-finking and (Anil flerliT Cutting and Fitting. 21.1 , 0, a perfegt sv.iteni.t. , f Dr .'..Cutting taught. l'i,:t tertissent by -noill or rxpreas nail parts of the T...rti6n. • -. . 11.lics. 'NO. A. BINDEIVS , N. W. eor, Flevrifila and 'eperdwit Et..; l'lt tLA D . A. fret 1, '7O-44.1-3in , . . ~. . , -, • ... ! T " , A TORRID SYSTEM —Sqinntitur.3. ,without z - kany as , igatthlt cause, th physical strength and animal spirits ON way, falf ',a nfrunge torpor 'fulls alike on body and intelleet There-la little or no pain perhaps-bot the natur.i.i vigandr an eta:itchy of 1 , theaervotneit ol.ninsenlar sy - otenr.seents to have de parted, and at I nth ffe_renee I. I lief pleasures of life, and, even of it:' grave rev nslbilitles. tiakea - tfie place of that Earnest Inter,: in both 'which' chnragA terizei - evC!ry l t rtfil hilnetc...l I in I wiien in a healthy condition.f ••- t. s . . ~. COAL ~ This state of parti.tlelliap+ is often the pr.eloofil - tory 'syinofttons of some seqous itvilit ty. ft:lngl e:item intmtst4kstbl.V that thtryltal powers are 1:111- - guisliing andipeedit Stimulant, In such ewes the effect, of a few flosei of'llo44iitter's• Stoitoich.llitters , is wonderfully benellcial. Tile great ton to, wages 'no ,the-systern tii to IL-drowse. IfileseerettniPt and' , the clrrolattlon. teceivit n new Impetus. The relaxed nerves recover fliele.elastteitlY'under. the oporiitions of t he.speoltic,li It'd thg.slockhned strength of av tif u stela itisfriiment hi the proctesS of tuning. Lethar gy and dilbillty arc kepi:wed Ii • energy and }lgor, too :spirits rise, and life that al lost sctmerd Ti burden while the seailat-offdepres,b i lasted, becomes once T i, ' more enjoyable.. Thatottiell I noticed chianti. slimild be produced by - idi lreMetly t ntlrely devoid of the powerful tilkalitiflOind minerals so extensively used : ' itemodera prnalee. , may nee . in incredible to those who pin their' faith ow th medicinal effi cagy of active oolsohif, lint If these sceptics . ; will take the e l • , • . trouble to enquire of those 7" i ,. o trace -tested the car reetive n alterative virta of 'the- - Bitters Sander . I the elreunistidiceS described • they will MAI the i statement tolie true. - • - . ' ' Jan. - 1 ,'7 1 ) . • ; 1-ly LOAL:SECIPPP.II ANIff I DEALERB..IIZ.A.Dtir RECKON E tnr etim uting rtuntts , net and gni*• tons troth f1ee . ..6-rats Epht I/141nm simple and neentente .with atnrinnts castled nut: Efent trek , . of pnekage ley - enel4lng • C. W. kildppee of deal, :1134 Nalhnt 21'70,,30 7 1ak• • • .• • .": -•- - itt)t - wiT, ON MOAT itEM4ONit !ME T};}6ll4: .-is 4)1 ll: Bought -ancLSold Market ` . Rates.. tyrttross- .PACIFIC RAILROAD -BONDS AN 'SOLD, tiTOOKB 1101:611T o t OpArSiISSIOi ONLY. Chicago, - Danville— and _Vinceifies . • • . . . T . . First. mortgage 7. Per:. ' it - I:told' 13o;ds . ` ...-'. ,--'' Fon . 8 A 7.1;: 4.. - r 9 , ) A, N : 1)A 'efii i i•lil .INTEItI-t..-ri`. ec „Ver,unis rt.it orl :Ul . lute est.' la to,* ed - out Artily - . loklar;etr subject roc rettr;:ut irlitlit.., • t ."44. . . - • 4 Ei _. . 1„ . 1 .. -:-• ~,.. No, V I 4 Tillllli',t r., lal IL4I/E,1.P.111.A.,,. „ Moser r,41, 'M 7 *, .1. • I • ::.. ,_ ~ ..-4 ,4-I,v . COUP . ONB.. '.. ..i . , _ • • ...-- .. 1 0 . .... ,.. :TILE l'Ett 1. - t NT., , .. ~.. ' ;Op LI) 7- '.Ol-7P.-CrN S: ; .. . SUNBURY AND . •1. WISTOWN R. R; CO . :, •.--.. •• • • " .11.. T El ontrt 1. - . Wane paid onanta Ptha.date ~ atthe,oßToeof PAINITM, • ito phitirtE4 .-fitatlET• -; . ' • • PHlLliritlilA.v uc> . Treastmer. . • .• J. ciJ r.. su Ih~ 93,.'70--~INiR9Y-im. POTTSVILLE, SATURPAY) &10011 VG, OCTOBER 8, 1870. - _ icrir 15 - D' -,mpr . titw first-cl i t l ash TOPSY BUG- Terms reaxnnable: Apply to . Wll. IL SMITH, 04 Centre St. _ _ • frA,LE.—WIII be sold at a bargain, a' Dry /. Goods and Grocery Store In St. Mtn Good stand and good hitstness. .Apply at the.. : §ept MERCLIA,NTS".MIITEL: f 'Pottsville. rzo,ft. SALT.The-ENT.IRE `IiIIACHINEHY of a Frgsr-C.Lover Fouu Mix FLOURING MILL, as' good as new. ran be seen running uh to Ist‘of vernber: be sold In the whole or In harts. • FRILL & BEVEKLE, Poplar street, Reading, Pa, Oft 1, ;1)_1 4t I . * iG.P.iPIePorES - , — PENCE POSTS And RAILS: RAILROAD SILLS, mon TIMBER LAGGINGS, and 1I OOP YOLES„ for rale by • - • H. K. WESTON, • pt '7O-31-4t c No. T Norwegian St., Pottsville --,---.--- -r 4 OR -11.E.7#77. , -;-Twolnileett In Itasael's Office Itull#l- 1 ing, - eorner*,Seeond and .Mahan,tongo titreeta. 41431)1r-to lIENRY C....ltt:tiSt:l., Real Estate Agent, t A tuliitntongo 'Rivet. , ' March 13-if - : . . . ;' - # , - C'OE RENT. —STON.}.; ROUX with dwellitigat- Ltche • fsiI.(IVES, ncadetlk of Ilandfionte In the ilea• gold and black mix- . tutwi, and: a: fall line of beautlfu!Striped,Cash - • mere. fhi.g...l and llerl 'Shawls. ~3.150, a splendid assortnient bf - 311L1.13:EltV including L Nr i ' •-• 'Da VELVETS. it nONS, SlV•alin.-1,11,1 - IWEits„ce. • • & ROYER. 14 .'Pt . 7 4 -7. v..--t t f . 1110tabtli)Ijia Abucrtifituttiits. WALKER. & CRAWFORD, ( - .rßnr E 11.8 and DEALERS in LEATHER SLIOE FINDINGS, NO: NIS N. second ss.. below-Poplar, Philiulelphla. Spanish, Slaughter and Ilettilock Sole Skirting Calf Skins, Splits, Grain and Buff Upper. 0, Morocco, Binding's, 1.1n1n;44, A 'tit-Leather. A general assort ment of Shoe.Fki,iing3 and Uppers. We manatee ;ure Stout Kips nn,11 7 uper Lent her ex pressl.t for, the MINERS' 'fIIADE. :Cents' Foot ffannent and Cod Liver Oil.. L. N. WALKER:* Sept 1.7 Ir. M. CRAWFORD.' E'URNITURE WAREB 00M111. No. 5:3; CAL- LoWIITIAST.. PHILADELPHIA: b ' REGt.NTEIt & HOPKINS, Designerisund.Manufac tu rers of Fine Cabinet Ware; keep on hand a large aSsort men t of Walnut and Cottagr,Furnitnre, Ihnr, Husk, and e 'Woven W ire spring Mattra.sa. Goode; to be sent at a distance will be, packed-in a secure manner. We tier and sell for ttaSH, and In sci doing are enabled to furnish superior' goods at the lowest rates plssible., We solicit a call:, Sept - . 17,'7.0-38-1 40 Walnut St. Clat:. 0,, niErsip PAINTING.-- . . . " {. N.-) • • - , , 100 IS. of the PI 1. Comiet il 'o ' . - i - , - ' . I..lnlzpos PmTehrlrftg nit. of l ' es a d : ! • /2 ... '. r i a Itear dreaa eNoncris.io: i7r.= '1111.1111670AST.02,1) Zifort4 4th Bb,rhillidli. ' Oet i •••0 . ' ; Of 111Nallep 1441 1 . I. ----- • - 7 - , '; 40.8 t , NIVIISTDOW DECoItATIOISI , _LAP CURTATNS, . LAS •K r :t: -AN tr SILK '& WOOl. ‘11:11" I 0 S,- • of p..tors,'' . th'it hopnrtett. pAN' SHADES, . 1- ts NEwtszr , vlsTk. for ' itaiircid :Supplies.. ~. I, E. WALR.NTEN' t • • lALso.Nrc InkLi.;;lmpitim-sivr sTREET, May 70, lXty $lO 0 00Citfin/INTE.. . . 81;c1c14....AD ex.r:ella all other LcEnt!'" let. ruffle Unrivaled,Vaateness, Vor RA Unequaled. tinrnht I al; .3(1, gar its unenrparsetteerink%Propert3,-, . Lextly font!k Eeonotny. It cents Sem to Paint with Ruck ' l enil ntaal any other Whlte 'Lead extant, The saute covers More. more Dantble,nrel, tualze.4 Whiter Work: : I . itICIC.LEAp.La the , !.."heapefe add Best. • - slo,ilol GU AR. . N TEE. Ereels all other Zinc& • Ist. For its Unequaled Durability.' -• Fdr. Its,' Unrivaled initeneri." - / • :14. For its Unsurpassed.Coi'etlng Property. _ Lastly, *3r Ds Great' Eeeneln.Y.' ••• being the Cheapaatiltandeopiest, vid inrod Durable_ Will to Palat In the irorid . ' 8 1-1- 1( ONLY DUCE - LEAD AIN i> STICK 4 ,ZIN.c; I•II . 7 !.I3`CONV , LCIVED. •' '4ll'isfrte.'tiartfittarante n ettAy L h -Ifir ~ i"fiteturcr* stTcrz OorrAtiE . Prepared expresaltror. p.... v oing • Cottages, chid-katbilitaa of every 411kaiiptlet4 &nets. Tartildre different colors. • Durable, Cheap, unikOrt land Beaututd Shade*. • Baanyieroarobs.mest by 'mil It deeired: Dealers' Orden* maibe promptly .e.teeuted by the PMENCM. Rzetutiiiit& 31". gor.2rentit and Market Streetairhiladelphla. • • ' • 4 • 1 3' • *- • Cicely sayi you're a:pfiet ; may be; I Mn't much int rhyme; •- • . I reckon you'd gi give me a hundred, and beat me every Yaetrt 1 that'd this tray Koine Chaps puttup an Wee. But I takes mine. "straight trittuatt sngar7 and that's What ' s the matter with me: • • Poetre! Julie look round you-41kni I, rock, and nage; skute-brusb, rock, and alkali; ain't it a pretty page; Sun In the east at mornin% sun in the watt at igt; And the ahadow of, Ml* S - er statton the on 'y thing mores In idght. - • . Poetry !—Well now—Polly ! Pil7iy, run to your main; Run right away, my piloty ! Ry : Ely ! Ain't she-a lamb?. • • ", Poetry !..-:that reminds me- o suthin right in that snit Jest abet that. door Atar, will yer, for Cleely'a:ears.ds cute. • .Ye noticed Pollythe baby? A month af.irelche was ' born,• • • Cicely—my old woman—was moody-like and folorn; Out of her bend, and crazy, and talked of !lowers mull Family man, yourself, sir' Weil you know what a woman be's, ' . • - . . . . . l'Carvous she Was., and restless—said• that she ' "couldn't stay.'i - _- ' •- .. , Stay—and the nearest woufan seventeen in ileatu r ay. Hut I flied It up with the. Doctor,. and he said he would be oh band, ~ And I kinder stuck by the itanty, itnil fenced in that bit o' land.' — • . . I One night.'—the tenth of Oetoberl wake with a chill and fright, ' n .For the door It was standing .pcn, and Cicely warn't . ' in sight, • Buti a note was pinned oh the blanket, which, itssid • . 'that one • vonldn't stay," Itut had gone to visit her neighbor—seventeen toursaway . . • . . . When and hoir.she - stanipetted, I didn't.l-wwit for .tP, • See, . . _ For out in the rout!, next piiiiit, I started to, wild. as She: Bun niniellirst tlibeway and that crag; like n hound ' that iri inT the seem, For there'viirn't no track in *tie darkness to tell die the way she went. •• -1, , , ,• . L . • N-e hid some mighty-thrall moments'. afore T I kern' to this spot.-a. . Losts on the Plains in 's l l,drowtitted almost ,and shot ; Hut tout on this alkill desert, a hunting a eras'y wife, Was ra:ly IVY on- Ka t I,;'.fuet ory.a.s any t hing in thy life. m "t icely! Cicely - ! Cicely !" I called, and I Mild: my ' breath, And o "Cleely !" came from-the cm:yeti—and AU was as still as death,-. And 'T•lcely: Cii:ely ! Cicely !" came from - the rocks And 'Jest bqt a whisper of "Cicely !" dowti 60:ii them l)eaks Of snow. --- • I ain't ivhat r trou call relbclousL•but I pest look' ed up, to the sky— • ' c • And—llls yer's to what I'm coining, and 'may b - l'''.ye - think 1 Ile : Hut up away. to the custard, yallar and. big and far, I saw or a suddent risitig the shiglerist kind of star. • ' . . Ilig and yaller antlitauciug, It strums.; 'to beckon to , • me: n , „. Yaller and birt.ind .la:tieing, such , as you see: Big and yaller and Ll:Metig—l ne you er flse such a start And. I thought. of them sharps , in the Bible, and 1 -. Went for, it ittiot and thilr. , .' . . • - ' . . Oyer the brush and Mix - Idi4s, I stumbled and pushed ... • •Keepl ng. the star afore.rne, I went wherever It led. It might hey been for' en )lour, when ambient and . _ peart, and nigh; , ' 1 -!,..• ~ .. • Out of the yearth afore me thar rtzuf, PI b abY . S.erY. , • Listen! thar's the'sante musk.; but her lungs they are stronger now • • Thatr,the day 1 it:wired-her and her mother—Fin „denied 111 Jest know how, Bat the Doctor kern the nest mulnitounl the Joke o' the whole thing Is . That Vie never knetv u hat happened foun that very night to this! . , But Cicely saytryoU're a I,4et.,'acui may I) , e you might, some day, -, • • • . . Seit sling her a rliyme 'bout a baby,that was born in curious way. And see what she says; and. old felloW, wlfrn you r4 . peak of the star. don't ten Asbow 'twat% the I. etor.s lamern —for May I w 't won't soung _no well. Muntl!ly Jo( Lietol(r. • IoCT THE MIFF:IN FAMILY , first invented muffins,' au& who V, gave them that tilme' There 'is no subje2t so trifling that men need despair of getting something curious out •of it-in the wav of information, they miry . ' seriously set themselves to work. ~N o sooner was the above question submitted "to.NotT.I4 Astl"QuEniks, than inanY little boxes'oi knowledge were opened to aid in a response. If we• find that muffin Is not in the early editions .of Johnson's tqctionary, there is sorrof negative evidence which mayinduce .us to search further: Technologically speak :AN.; an English -.Mullin' Is made of flour, yeast, salvand water, without any sugary fir buttery additiOn ;. separate portions of the . dough_made With these ingredients , are al . lowed to rise or ferment, and are baked on a heated iron plate, being turned to alloW each. surface a fair share of heat. A' innflin.is. therefore, a:small loaf of leavened bread, -1 dainty, or fancy bread; Although .we do not it such. Now, •in every •corner of the !civilized world cakes or Oat loaves of some ,]stieh character are to be met with ; there fore,.:the first origin of the thing itself is hopeless to search for. .Given the meal, the watts, and the hot iron plate, and you make :your cake .ins numberless ways-7-IYr - :varying :the kind of corn, by using or omitting yeast, and by adding any among a multitude of other ingredients. oa6 feria of Beotsh seen or atone, we. are told, iS made of oat grains Steeped in water till' they ferment, then boiled to a paste, and then poured on a grid- Ale to bake: In Hollatfil there lira kind of cake Sold at - booth:4 in lair tune, , made of flour and water, fermented, for three hours, poured an heated tongs grooved with deep furrows, clasped in the tongs,. and kept a Short tithe until baked;. they comeout shaped .solnething like the' portcullis. of he ancient • castle and are eaten with sugar an honey: its to the origin of the name, on theory is. that mou-pain; soft bread in old tenchilia/4 become gradually, changed to n tint: But . Mr. Urquhart would not accept simple an explanatiorias this ; He went ack i to very ancient days Indeed, and ;foun that Athe metts made mention of P tenician ma-' pilule, a kind Of,Calte baked n a hearth or griddle; from whence.. come • then deriva, rives, „somewhat in this ord r : Muphula, mtifula t mufun, muffin:, Th, n there were munphius and the Hebrew moph, both broUght into, requisition. Moreover, Mr. Urquhart ranged .over the whole scope , of the ancient world, and of oriental countries hi .modern- times, in search of c.akes._ that could-with any degree of reasonableness be compared with ruilfflns. He met with the sten, the lackmar, the lackniaringof,the the .broddapsop, the gas si cadaef the del decant, theyoufka, the kuladj, ,the khebes an ;he -neidah ; and he discoursed about theft-01in a manlier that would gratify ; any ninllln titan of inquiring-4'llnd. . The crumpet, as the thin and slender sister of the niuffip, is always associated with it by the bakers and' dealers; though difibring somewhat -in character, seeing that, while muffins' are made of dough, 'crutnpets • are made ',of batter. The batter consists Of firm dou'r,• yeast and milk, or (in Inferior kinds) water:; it is poured into a .shallow, circular, heated iron pan of suitable dimensions and baked. Ask your 'doctor whether:you may eftVmuch ,of this iiisury, especially if satu rated with butter. You .will not have to wait long foran answer. Some . authorities opine that.erumpet Comes from the French crumputc, a paste made of fine flour, slightly baked and that' the first syllable, erum may possibly have something to do with the crinkled or crimped Appearance of the sur/ fece. Indeed, brum.is nearly the form of an Anglo-saxon word for crinkled. ' 4 l'he Span iards have crumpets; but call them by . ft very. llgrerent name, txmuelos.: . - PA:wax - vs. • • Who first made pancakes, and what is pancake he'll: Here ionnotherdainty brea queStionOvhich leads up to results quite as curious as those 'relating to muffins. An" English pancake, in our own day, is known to.mostnt us. It is rbt - bread;,. Jo our esti-' pa,rtakei rather of the nature of postry ; l is not•considered enirect at breakl 'fast, or .tea, but quite so at dinner. Soule say that the first - pancakes were made before the, invention of ovens, and that they simply belong to: the - general 'farcally of flat cakes, balked on hot iron plates of in iron shallow pans. Very nearly five hundred yearsago there were pancakes made ,in England un der . the name of comadores, which must have been toothsOme and tempting. The fidlir was a'. 'zed with BAR, raisins and wine, and the mkesetere fried In oil. • But the pancakes is the Shrove Tuesday bration ; andonorespecial still,. the iingin of Ake pancake bell at 11 o'clock' in the forencs* of thnt day...'There Is 'a meaning here, no doubt, if we could only it. Two centuries and half ago, 9r thereabuiits, there wasaquaintwriterknown a' Taylor t the water-poet, who had his little - biting satire against everything . and every body, rancakes, a. Well as pancake makers and eaters, came In for &share of his notice:: He says:that on tibrove Tuesday, "when the clock:Strikes eleven,' which. (by the help of s'ltnavish sexton) is cornmouly before ine, there Is a bell rung called the paticalt the isound whereof makes thousands o g pie distracted, and forgetful either of nets or ;humanity. 'Then there is ng caked whetter' tour; which thileon *. do mingle with water, eggs, : srPice andother inagiehl enchantments ; and , then they petit by little and little into a frying =lf boilingsuet, where it midges a ton (Jinn hissing (like the• Lernean snakes in the reethi of Aebekm), until at last, • by the AM. of the 'look, It is, transformed into the Awntola sllpjaek, *lade paneskei • , . . - \ tRS, ‘l' • T.KALI DAINDI BREAD CACMPETS which ominous incantatlohille ignorant, people de•devour most greeditYl! CertaiiilY the people did, and=do devour the pancakes I willingly, if not greedily ; but they :by no - MeIIIIS regard them as ominous Incantations. Eleven . o'cleek,' too,. has still something to do witlfthis Matter. 7n' many parts of the. centre and north of England the - church, bell rings -out at eleven o'clock on Shrove Tuedny. Such was the ease at Doncaster old church. before it --was• bunted-In 1853: and such maypossibly be the ease ..in the new 'church. •In MI these • insUmees_it is 'palled the pancake bell.. la. some towns,W,rings'! in a- holiday for the apprentice others generally; There is one par ishthe.nort It *here all the apprentices . ' wl&te * indentur i have recently expired as g-entide in the lielf7 :steeple - and iu turn:Hug .the .bell, the - Sexton reeei vi fig a small . fee frofn each lad, and at the sound of the - bell all the housewives in the parish beglirto fry . pancakes. • Thert3 are schools hi which the master, at eleven - o'cloek.one,the eventful mottling, will say to the you .... ;stems, "Now, boys, the -pancake bell is ringing. hume and help your mothers to - make the pan cakes:" Nay, even at the dignified West tninster School, there is a pancake cerCtiw-. rant on the-day. At elevero'clock'on Shrove Tuesday. we are told,;lmil of the vergers of the Abbey goes into the school kitchen and presently emerges with .the head wok, thei latter Icarrying a thick substantial. pancake I in a frying pan: .• Entering the school room the vcrger'announces "the'cook l" • Studies are sturpended and all eyes•are tamed upon the cook, conspicuous_ b.•liht White apron, .jacket and cap.. AtiVancing to the' een-tie of the room, he approaches ; the . elevat&l bar which separateS the - upper . Schoolfrott the lower. • Twirling - the frying pan dexterously round, he Writs to throw the- pancake over 'the bar; -if-he fails, the boys pelt hint with books if he succeeds, he obtains two guin-, ens front the Abbey funds—therefore he makes a point of succeeding. • Then comes , a-struggle: • Iftlte paneakels. broken into fragments during-the- scramble for - it, no_re ward,ensues; but - if One . boy•ean 'Carry it otf safely to the deanery, th 4 'dean gives Mtn- a, -We. may safely surmise that the paticake is purposely-made thick,•tough and strong:, to beai this . .strange ordeal. But now -about the origin, of, all this? There IS a popular theory iu jlansfeld and Sherwood ForeSt connecting the pancakes. with the old days when the Danes-ravaged that part of. England. When the: Danes reached the ;owner ?illago of Libby, all the Saxon inert of .the veighhorino• villages %ran oil' into the forest, and the Danes took the I Saxon' women to keep house for them: :The women, by secret agreement. with their countrymen, undertook-to murder their Dan ish tyrants otf the ensuing iksh 'Weduesday. Every woman who 'agreed Lto do this was to bake a pan cake on ShroVe Tuesday, 4.4 a kitid of.pledge to fulfil her vow. .•Evergthing teok place accordingly, ; othe.pancakes -were made on the. Tuesday,' and the Danish ratitsput to death on the Wednegday. A very good story this, front a Sa.xim point of view, but there is another, touch tuere•cogent and . -reasonable. In the old church days, When the Lenten tast•Was n serious matter, the church -bell summoned the' people to shrove, site ft, confession on the day 'be 'lure ASIt• Wednesday, :1-S a preparative to Lent. And either the same bell, or another ringing on the &Tine, day, set the housewives busily to work to use up all the dripping, lard, and`ht . rease in the house; pancakes were . made in suire, 'and 'a jollification - enkied,Tto . mark thetransit ion from feasting to fastitig. Such,: it -seems, was:the origin of thepad, cake bell. " 110T' ('Noss Ift7NS . . And wliti invented hot erosJitins? 'Here is another query,. 'another crotchet, relating. to daint3 , bread. Cotgrnve, one of our old lexiecigraphers, 'spoke of "a kind of hard ,, crusted brend.• Whose loaves doe 'Somewhat resemble the - 'Dutch _buntms - of our' Rhenish winehouse." Now,.. this is a noteworthy point;, for the biril crusted bread taken With 1 wine more resembles wine biscuits or Wine ifti - ks than ,our soft buns. There.are Scotch buns, made and eaten chietlY' at Christmas, with a very hard ernst; - something.like those apparently here adVerted to; a soft English bun would be rather culledn cookie or cooky in the north.. Somebuns; containing corian der seeds, and' eaten with. honey, resemble (though:,largep the altar, bread used in some .countries in fovnier ages. - • ~ ' -, . The, hot cross bun, however, 'is admittedly .associated with the most solemn dayin the , Unwell A-tile:id:tr. There was at brie time a superstition that bread baked on Good Friday. possessed 'SpecihE: Virtues ;. some of 'it ' tvas . kept all through. the year, under a belief that a few gratings of ,it in water i'vou Id be a rem edy for Many. 1)9(14 diseases. In England, as we all know (but not in 6eotlalllii, the nurehase of biros hot front the oven is one of i.......,......:...-t—, ognistAt modes 'of observing' GoOd Friday.. The bun is somewhat spiey inside, and has 4 sugary glaze on - the top, at h a cross Inlarked or stamped there - on. , Whither it is eaten-hot or col d-, with butter or without, tonsted'or untonsted, each family decides ac cording to circumstances ;• but the itinerant . vendors (not so numerous now as of yore) all have pretty nitwit the, sane cry. Who .thesevendors,hre, whence they 'come:and whatds their ' occupation on the other three hundred and sixty-four days of the year; are questions * left -somewhat in Mystery; for the people are evidentlymot all connected with r r the bakin . trade. ' That the buns att.,!`one a penny, we a penny," are farts asserted in a very dE termined.And unanimous way by the vendors. .: . ' - . There is abundant • eVidonce that. the hot cross bun, the Good 'Friday bun, had a reli giousorigin, in very. remote (Ir*ek days. sa cred cross-bread, called Boun, Was offeredup to:the heathen deitleS as a sacerdotal cetera°. ny ; the bread - • was .niade of fine flour and. honey. If this be so, _then bun has a very. classical origin indeed, - in being derived . from Bonn. This - Bolin came from Roux, ox or cattle : and - the name was applied to the cake iir bun bee:lass the representation of: two hot:ns was stamped upon, it. The bun was usually purchased by the purchasers . at the entrance of the temple, taken in by them and eaten during the sacrificial' ceremonies.- In times somewhat - later, but still ancient, a cross was substituted for the bull horns on the bud ; and We are told r "Al 'Herculaneum. .were-found two small loaves about five ifich-. es in diameter, marked , withTa . cross, within which were four other lines. Sometimes the bread had .only four lines ." altogether, and then. it was, called gnadra: The bread had rarely.: any other mark then a cross, which Was on purpose to divide and eat'it more easily.. Similar leaves were discovered in a bakehouse at Pompeii." When • the Chris tian Church were 'supplanted • heathen usages buns were retained ; they,. were Made from:the samedough as the, host or consecra ted wafer, but were not the mselves conseer*. ted ; they.Weredistribrited by the:priests to . the.rieople after' mass,. just berate dismissal. Less scileniii than. the Wafer-or host, they had' still a sacrificial Character about them ; - .the' cross marked , on : each bun. .having a new syinbolle meaning iniparted to _it. And so, by an intelligible process they became spe cially associated with - one particular day in the - year. And noV, eat the buns,' hot and spicy, • once a year, • without thinking of Weeks 'Or Jews; or Romans, .of Boma or .ox, horn or temples; 'There is still to be seen - :, in somer-of our peasants' houses a bun - Which hangs from the eellingl:m . one GoOd Friday to the.nekt it. is regarded .as a preServative againstsvils:—All Yea? Round. • THE 13ATTLE PrEIAJS THE. EARLY HE AHQ C;A ETERS OF. .TY POO it A PI-117.—A correspondent of Nittf.:: , .!4NrrQ • RIES - draws. attentiOn : to the' fact - that_the ''battie-fiehis of the tiresent mow:sign attained early eelebrityas the headquarters of ty pogi. rapphyy Dleiz was one of the first towns. Which Pd: the art of printing, and the - ancient'which came from its press are numerinia.. Stnii;iburg,-. is asserted to here' been forsaime -years the home of. John Outenhurg; although no dated book is extant ofAn earlier year - than 1471.. Toni is Labe noted 7 a.4 the - place at which one. of the first ilitemPts- -. stereotyping 'was 'made. The 84dart editions cOmpete with the Elzevirs in the estimation of book collectors, - -and • are beautiful ,exa k intiles - of minute typography. Kehl wits the.unimate , testing-place of Ba kenille's type : , : , with which M. Beaumar-' chais printed an - edition of - Voltaire's Works ombluepaper : Co, King Frederick. of Prussia, "wholared under - Weakness of the eves." At R'eltneand Verdun printing,*as carried, :on at an early„.dato, and • the-latter ,place.has a special interest as having been , the : place where the!English 141k:toe - IN who were de- tained by-Napoletin 1.. printed, with - his per . mission, ati, edition of the ,English hook of ,Vommon - Prayer, There-seems' to be. little doubt whether .We derived our Sedan chairs directly front the - place .of that name, far Evelyn asserts.that they were brought from Italyr by Bli tr )landeis . buncombe , . and - the word - May, rhtips, be related to theFltallan *cdente. T Polntls as knotty as that Con ' neeted :with:Abe kindred word coach, on atich :voluitttcs have been livrittett..Blolxfrt-, lia t ifthe rival' laims of Kettsee, ali,u4garian and tihe French coacher, Wi deny our Lord whenever ire-forsake a. good man ran antictkai, - and refuse to give countenance, encouragement.and support, to triage who, for God's sake and for the faithful, discharge of their duty, are exposed to perse ,, i, cation and} slander. SINGLE COPIES; SIX CENTS. lIF BRUGES BE L FRY 611,1111E.4'. . fiIHE Suthorof "Stories front Attic,' .1- gives the', following refutable sketch of the chimes heard .pealing from the 'belfry towers in the (inapt old Belgian town of Bruges; - L • A long, dark staired4 leads,-step 'bk - step; within the tower to its top. At last,a:riar-: mw ladder leads into the 'Chamber where the' .• hells are There isthe great bell of all, and•there-hesides are forty-seven other bells:, of.diffemit weight ranging 'from twelve to_ • nearly (welve thousand pounds; and it is on these that,the chimes are, rung.- They have the s\iceteStlone of all the bells in Belgium. Inour countem a chime is a' rare. thing; and , rings the chimes at.'rrinity Church, .in .N•eivrYork; on public days, the programme is puilislied in the newspapers.. and net he hour people "stand about the head of Wall street', to hear with all their might,. - while as far as the bells Call be heard ; people :are listening as to something guilt unusual:: It •is different in Belgium,. and. indeed in • :other European. countries, where. they are ;:fnost common. • • , r It WOilld :.not be poSsible for any one stand- ' v i !itigpu lling at' the foot, f the toNter to r* ig the chimps at truges by nOW tivon tie rope, now, !upon another, as lie„Wishedto rit g a partieu, liar belL . To inake it possible for the perform er, there is a very ingenjouis contrivance in the-, chamber below that 'Contoitilisg the bells, by which the musician sit-4 at a great key-board, - ,. like that-bra piano, the keys of which con- ' lieet with the harnment that strike the . bells. He strikes the keAt, not with his fingers but . with his : tists,,Which tire guarded_by leathern coverings; and though great foreels required, sometinieSlieing , ,eqbal to two, pounds' weight :• on each keyi -Musicians- have acquired. mar-:. velous sk ii playing- oil \ these ' colossal in-- , struments ;. they can indeed play music: hi three parts, the baSe behiglilayed on pedalo, and the first and secondtrebleS - with the. . ~., • hands. - But the chimes are SourtilkLevery fifteen - Minutes, and it iS plain that no musician could be so constantly at work. • In fact, it is only occasionally, upon Sundays chiefly, that any one plays upet - the bc,lls; for generallY the-bells play themselves. There is a great cylinder in' the chamber; front the circurtifer ence.of which project Pegs placed at proper IntervaLsotecording_ . to the order ht which each bell is to be struck. This is. made to. re volve by. clock-work, and the..pegs.,are thus bkought into . contact with' levers ..operat 7 ing upOn • th 6 bell-hammers. • The . Nibole is a sort, of gigantic music -box, only, instead .of the steel comb, which one.theric-sees' pro .ducing the music by vibrating after contact with, the pegs, the music. here is produced by olever - connected with the comb, as it were. And just' us tlr airs iii the music-box can be changed, so Those in the. belfry Can 45e Chang:. ed —once a year, think-,-by alterint-the relation betiveen the'pegs and.the hammers. .'LIFE AMOrG THE RoirA.Ns TY . anything more were wanted to give us 1.• an idea of Roman magnificence, we would turn our'eyes from public monuments; demoralizing games, and grand prociessiens;; • • "would forget the statues • in, brass and '" marble, .which outnumbered the living In-, • habitants, -so ,numerous that one luindred thiSusaild. have been recovered and still em ; hellish Ituly, - - and iwould deseetul :into the lower.sphe re - of 'material, life' to_ those things • Which attest limn rrand Witte, ',to ornaments, • dreSses, sunptuons2tiving, mid rich': furni tinte. The art of using metals' and liregieui stones surpassed anything knew ii ut the pies-, .ent'time: . - - - ‘ In the decoration of .houses,, in social eif- - 't,ertainments,'• and in . cookery the Roxiaans. Were temarkable.' The mosaics, signet-ring* cameos,:, bracelets, • bronzeS, . chain's - , - - vises, pouches,' banqueting-tables, gilding, mirrors, , mattraes, cosmetics,- perfumes, hairdyes, silk-robes, potteries—all attest great elegance ? 'and' : beat A yn The tables of, thugardot. and. Italian Tironze 4 iVere as - expensive .as the shieboarUs. of Spanish iValnut So much ad -lilif.al-iniltejtreat exhibition. at London.— Wood and -, i„ynry were carved as exqPisitely - as ill Japan and China. , Mirrors were Made .. I• - : of pens led'silver. - Glass cutters could iruki. tat - the 'colorslof precious stones so well: that . tlj?' Portiand - tase ' from the tomb of Alexan der SeVerus„ Was long considered, ass a genu ine sardonyx. Brass eould be ihardened- tio as to et stone. u . : . The paittee'of Nero glittered with gold and .jmi - els. Perfumes and flowers were showered from iVOL'y ceilings. The halls of Heliogaba- .. Ins were hung; with - cloth atidlgold, enriched with jewelrv , .-7'lits beds were silver,'snd his table of golds -.Tiberius gave a million of Ses- teret_.S for a- picture of his: bedroom. A ban- . quct dish of Disilits weighed live hundred ?abut! .of silver.. The cups of Dra-Sus -were .of 'gold. Timics were embroidered With. the figures of various animals. :Pauline wore jewels; when she paid visitsNvalued'at £7O,- - 000. • Drinking eups Were engraved with scenes fronfthe poets. Libraries were adorn-' ed .with busts and presses of hire Woods. : - Ste- • 'fas Werelnlaiti with tortoise shell,, and. coy- ... erect with gorgeous purple. , '1 - . The.Roni inlees nide in gilded --cha ri-ots,- b ell in marble baths, dined from . E golden plate, drank from: crystalc ps, slept. ~••- on 'beds of. down, reclined ;on ', uxuriant.. '- conches, wore'embroittered -robes, ndswere- adorned,With precious-. stones. They: ran- - sacked the earth - and the sea for rare - dishes , : for their - banquets, and ornamented their houses with carpets from Babylon, onyx cups, cups from Bythinia, marble from Nutrildla, -bronzes from Corinth, statues from-Athens,— ;whatever, in short, was. precious -or: outlaws : in most countries. The luxuries of the bath • almost exceeded belief; . and on the walls were magnificent frescoes and _paintings ex-,. hibiting.an inexhaustible productiveness •in '. landscape and-mythological scenes:- 4 •.. . •. • , itjRIOUS FACT Ili- - IVATURAL4IIS- ToRY.—A surveyor, who was reeentlz' making some etplorationsmnong the moun tains of Shaftattury, discovered -upon one of the mountains (twelve hundred feet in height; a-singular conformation of rock, weighing probably -several thousand tons, -of the kind • called speckled granite. It was mph the shape of half an egg—the part corresponding to the. outside shell being very regular and . smooth. The end*here it appeared to.have been separated from another portion' of rock in part gave indication, of a seam, • and in part exhibited an . irregular sdiface,' as if the solid'rock had been broken. • The form and situation of the reek were se -peculiar, thit the surveyor took particular notice of them and, hr the course of his explorations , he ail- - cended a. mountain some feel miles distant,. . at the top-of which he found the counterpart,• of Iherock on. the other Mountain; the bro ken end . of the other,. So that ho could not - -feel the least dcubt of their having conatitu-. ted at some time an Immense egg-shaped pebble: - The surveyor's explanation. was, 'that when the surface of that portion- of the eiirtirtuuLdowered: with water, this immense , Bock was !Tiled by the -ice - frozen JO its sur- - • • face, and split 1.32,7„t1ie freezing of t4ter - tliat',' entered the seam, , r and that it had heen de- ' posited in parts its the ice melted v one per-, tion upon bole mountain and the other upon the other, the break In the ice Corresponding. to that in the rock.. T x t r . Hi' LACE: IS COSTL p eo . V ple-wonder wh - Y what is termed "real" - lace—as la ce -made by hand is called, to dis:: tinguish it from that - nude uy machine,. which is called "mutation"-is so costly : — The following paragraph from a foreign ex change, explains the reason • "The manufacture of lace is carried to its , highest perfection in Belgium. The finest specimen of Brussels lace is 'so eomplicatOd as to require the labor of seven permit's .stm, one piece, and eachloperative is employet ate distinct features Of the woik. • The thread , used is of exquisite' fineness, Which is Spins _in. dark, underground rooms, where it• le _sufficiently motet to prevent the thread from 'separating. It is - sa delicate as' searbely to be seen, and the .room As.so arranged tlutt all Use light admitted sisall fall upon fiat? work. .. It is such material that renders - the gentilhe Brussels-ground, so costiv. • On a piece of Valenciennes not two inchba.whie, hom two to • three hundred bobbins .are sometime* used, and for the larger, width tut • many as eight hundred, on the' same pillow. The • must faluable Valenciennes is deterinlned. by - thei•numb4r of times the bobbins have been twisted in making the= ground;•the4 more frequent the twists, the clearer and .more" beautiful will be the. lace. - Belgium annually sells of thiselace alone to tbe.vidue, of over. four millionctiollars. 'filhitittilly lace is always bla6k b and is used chiefly fcirvelb4. and flounces. It is very fine, and, Is exten sii*l3cworn. Mechlin lace is made at Mob • lin; Antwerp, and other loaalities.." WILUA PEN:es fatuous saying sliould be Smitten :upon .every church's banner: "No-[ in, no `,Wro ;bah ; no thorn, - no thtte,; . 1 / a 4 M* no glory; no Gross, no crown." A 3iis owning.a luiinse worth $lOOOO Chleagoliktd, and tbebouse he resided ni after •: n he : was dead- only cost seven &as. His , belts said he Would keep Just as long Ina / pilleP ealn is any. . - •- ' 1s•