The miners' journal. (Pottsville, Pa.) 1870-1873, November 12, 1870, Image 1

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________ .„ ________ . __________ .._________— ,
GI
_
FpRTy-=.SIXTHYEAR. No
g0A.14 TRADE _,A.DYERT
Port licljnionb.
, • pier N.. 4, pet Imosed. .- . .
.e. •
WELD RICE CO
, • 2
.'.
.•
. Shippers of the Beat Qualitleii et
8 H KMOKIN and fICIIITYLKIEL, . ' ' •
• - . RED and WHITE Asa
• ._. 'C 0A E ; '' •
?• A 9...... 1931 TEI CeLinitarero
'PINE KNOT '', aid other choice
• Locusr uourrrem coAL,
. cIimBERLAND VEIN Aftummous. • .
......
' ... _ ./ • leosWWW.aut Bt.. Philadelphia. -"
—places : 111 Meadway„ riouTork.
i x,
II Doane Street, Beaton. • .
- ' Jan. 1,- .1—
-
t•PI os No. 5, Port aloloskod. '
HAAB. BRENIZER,
Miners and Shippers of.
THE SUPERIOR
" • TURKE Y
.RUN. COAL,
• mrD Sons. Aorerro Pon
Leo. Grant Ai Co..' Celebrated
•
P VA RIP G E COAL.
SIS Warant St., Philadelphia,
Once": SI Trinity Building. New York.
ll'Doan•St., Boehm. : •
Feb 19, 70 .
~
-0
LASTNER, • aTICKNEY & • WELLINGTON
Miners and Shippers of Coal.
BURNSIDE., from their Burnside Col. st Shamokin
LEWIS VEIN aed Ash.):
LOCUST MOUNTAIN White Ash.)
I
39 Trinity . New. York.
dicer: 203 Walnut Street, &Pk's.
` • ' 20 Doane Street. Horton. WHA Ir No. t. PORT RICHMOND, PHILA.
Jan: 1. "•' 7O. 1—
.
'• Pler - 7, Port IttleiuriMed. „.
HAMMTT I • NEILL & 0(5.,,
' Shippers of Anthracite at Bitunihmis
--: COA L. . ."
........_.
~•
- AGENTS for theitalit of the oelebrited SHENAN-
IitiAII CITY,WIGGA,N &TRIESELBLocust Mc-son
. Jain end Burnside Shamokin , • -
.. _ W 7 11 i: AFh Poa.l. •
•
. . • ~1 ..,..---,--.
" Also, SPOILN and PEACH MOUNTAIN '-
Rqd Ash Coat.
_ .
•-- _
•
FROM nosoKlex, • • _ • • .
The best 'toilettes of .:Lehigh mold Boylan's *CELE
BRATED FAMILY COAL . s
~ .
'Also, Bole Agents in the Eastern market for the
• Atlantic and George's. Creek We celebrated SITU
,
MlNOthi ,COAL: . .
,• .
. - 'Philo/Wields. 1147 Walnut Street, ' •
i nn - New York. Boom 6, Trinity Building, .
Providence, $7 Custom. Homo Street,
_Boston.lls Doane Street, - .
Pebnaity . 22. 4 1 9 s v S—ly
• Pier NO. irk Port Richmond. . •
JOHN B. W.tirrri & . 'SON,
• ~ .
Shippers o f -
No. 318 WALNUT ST.; PHILADELPHIA.
• Benda IMllterage and sap or owl
N0;514 West Thirteenth Street, Now Twit.
Nu IMP Third Avenue, New York.
Ives' Wharf. No. 99, India Street. Proildenee.
Copp" Wharf; Mt. Wsehleyttoa Avenue, near
Fedexita Street, Boston. .Tan. l .l o —/ •
it
HAMELIN COAL OP LEICENS VALLEY.
DEALERS ARE CAUTIONED that' there are
but four Collierlist which mine this Coal, sit of
which are under the management of the undersitri ,
ea. For the year 1870 SINNICKSO N &.00., of Ph la
delphia, - , 111 be the only Agents for its sale In New.
England - , lew-York; New Jersey, and South of Owe
Henry • . d HALL IIII.0*3.,& CO., of Baltimore for,all
other 'annul. Our Agents will detain no other coal
whatev• , - and parties wishing the pure gen it ine art I- I
de MU in Tirpetirre Ito( therm The object of thix.ca,.utlol) 1
~ .
e, simply ell enable tinue Interested to buy'iider- %
etandingtX• - - ,: DAVID - k3ON YOUNG - QC)
..
The Agents, and their a s sistan t s for the' above ~
... .i , .
.......,. tasikiac
Dr.itriti
lie
~ , ,,- 0 .-,
whits, are as follows: SINNICKSON & CO., General ! ' .. • .. "."" .
'Agents, 112 Walnut street, Philadelphia; their N ew .!, f,eghTST . &lOUNTAIN, SHAMOKIN, I.LiWf ". 3H,
lortf. Obits is at Room &I, Trinity Buildittga,foS. P..; CVM BERIA ND.- t3CRANTOV a .veII.KFISIMItItE
MOODY, Agent; assisted by ZLISHA -310biELEY, t
Agent, V Summer street, Boston. ' - --',. .
HALL BROTHERS & CO., Genefal Agents, '.:, Itost j ' :., •e - -.'' ' ~ •Se • .
'r
- '1 ,.. ) ' Cb AM
odiee avenue, BaltlmoreMd..; represented' al liar. 1 - - .- . - •
t isuurg, Pa., .b3t_ JOSEPH 0. STERRETT. Orden; ; ROOM Nu. Iti, TRINITY •BUILDINO, NEW YORK.
rhauld be given to eltherof the above named parths, t • WM. 31. DAVIDSON, formerly Of Tyler &. Co. .
Al nd to uo one else. WM. B. FOWI.E General ltlattager- ..
4' MA, Nriat. YOUNG, formerlyef Caldwell, (Jordon &Cu
ut the Summit Branch It, R. Co., the Short Mt. Coal j RoBERT Kt BUCKMAN. ---..
co., and the Lyketut Vaßey t)..%al CO. [Jan. I, •70-1 . i •
_ • _ j ran 0,, . ...v.
- : - , It-ty
1
. • I pi‘• jOH/i BOl4 itt9/30/CEN .
-.. i " •
- j• • 6 . a -.
VAN WIC= & STOUT,
.111114[611 AND /1111PP1t;RS or THIC ... 4, .
C3faited " Fulton" 4 "Ste*" ,(ehigh) aids,
i ...
Vronal the Eberrali and t he Stout Collieries, near
liazletAn, • Pa. Delivered direct from mime on
board. Vessels at Pr. JonasuN, .11onoxElr, and New
Bette we. N.'-J: .. , ~ ,
• {44 A 46 Trinity•Bultdiag
—`_. . •
.
..- ' Oen :. 11l Broadway, New York: ' f •
ay la emporary 01.11.8 BroadiraY./.., .
..- ,dS - -
t
. N,
Pier No. 10 Port Richmond.
SINNICKSON. & CO '
Sole Agent.% for The kale ana
"Franklin Coal of ',Lykens!Valley "
,u Nest -Englund, new f9rk;.,Neliv Jeri.jey and rioutlr
• . - 1..,,e4"e Henry "
r• -- r - ;
(132 Walnut fitteet. rhiladulphin.' - .
Oakes :.,(' 6.8 Trinity Building,
New leek. .
• 'l ; 32 Summer Street, Bootees,
~ • .
JOSE:PILO. MOODY. Agent
P: O. ii MN: Se.- -s,Eirlt
-;;i- Sum. 1, '1•1-1-
WALiER,EiCiNALbON ,- &
I T.l ?Mc AN 121,1911PPERS. OV
♦V I na-E 11:Eal AS
COAL.
• ! 3 • 011.E. AGENTS for the Celebrate.J .
"THOMAS LEHIGH " :CGAL
• C 205 Walnut Strek...Philadelphia.
UUKei:. -.lt) Trinity Building. New York. .
'l9 Duane Street, Boeton. . •••
W.ll'Alt.F—Pier 11 Port alelnuOndi. •
rel, 241. '7u - 11-tf
ilionAS CAM MORROVIIACKKR. ,JMSK:II. COOK.
CAIN, HACKER Br - , COOK:
.. , ' , tilllyPEßS OF, z ;
. -.- ..
1.6 ~ :S r 6.5,p, LOCUST. MOUNTAIN, 41.Nd.Z.
. . •. • Iit:ATI!. ; . ,
Xi....., n 1:.% L EMS IN OTHER FIRST 41.7,A LITI fe4 oF .
\\Alit e and Red .As•lit Coalk,
50..114 Walnut Street, Ptilladeltia. and Wood
land Wharvea, - Schuylkl Wier. :
.141 - Ei B. ST YKER, -
~.
iiIILPPER AND AGENT, ,
Schuylkill ilaren, PfL.
Jun..1.'70.-1
Pier 19,,:r0rt Richmond
. LOVE. 13 1 0YER Sti' . oo
t.
• ,
..., MB ITT:RS OF ' ,•1
- Anthracite ~.. and Bituminbui Coals.
(~,,.. t .. t .., t.E AOENTS FOR • •%,
' L: M BE tl LA -s'l ) YE:IN 13ITUMINOITS4 - !0A I. _
i 334 Walnut at., Phumietpi!.N. :
.. ...
matceg, - 13 Doane St.,Boston. - , r v -b ,
- t 27 Custom Ipase St., Provident*.
Burch 5. 711 10-ly •
• Pier.,llCtiorth Port Ittchinnizd.
JOHN . C...500TT,&. ,SOS,
Miners-and Shippers of Coal.
Ts FOR THE BALI OF
DALE, Li
n ieUgT 116UNTAINAVtilto-AA.h
• - "BEN FRANKLLN"...Deep Reit Aah. .
F.roin the ,otine v t pins and elmllar In all respects to
the LYRENS VALLEY Coitl.
FRANK GOWEN,SUAMOSIN• 4 40 -‘ O, l l •
.1 PHILAI3ELPULA.--*o. 226 Walnut St,..
Inner' 19 Doane St. • • •
17i-1.1117 VORIC,-.-111.. Er-roadway. Clstnber
.6l French, Airentsi,
• Jan . 1, '7O
!
ZDAY HUDDELL &
41 • ; I
,Miners Shippers of Coil.
( 2053,1 Walnut KG, Philadelphia. •
°We": l I l realliniT, (Trinity liiintiditsel N..T.
, Il
Doane Stmt, Bolton. '
"54,±e., Agent:, fur the - isle of the following celebrated
Coals: —* . •
HARLEIGH. LEHIGH COAL, •
iiI('ICORY COAL ('O::`( HICKORY AND' DRAPER,
• - coAL.4 and the • • '
CoAL
"Sit eviNGl\ClA„vim :-. 1 Pier No. hi Pl. Richmond.
. jun •t Pier Nu. izabet p' t ,
—•— '
pi.: No: 1U Port Kirtumid.
JOHN ROMM - EL, JR., & BROTHER,
• SOLE .!4GI-.NTS FOEf.
fhe Favorite And well khakis 1114 A H MHO:, OAilte Ash
ThefirperlerflVlllT CLyt, balky fiee.buralef/plek Ash.
The Ce.ebrwtedi DANIEL _WEFISTEIt Dee"-Ited As
iIILOAD TOP SEIII•BITVIINOUS. .
. •
RAvg,ws - WING LEHIGH at Enzeibethport.
• " 1 205; 7 4 Walnut St.,,l'hilmels. r. ,
°therm: . tit itemise Street, itimetns. . .
j.itooin .1.9. Trinity Building.tiew York.
- eikktatii: AGENT—AA MUEL F. Ft Cum, mpwhited I,y
'1 . ..-4. 'into w); :tad E. P.-urtiA3t. Mitres 6, '61.1-111
,VANDUSEN-BROTHER d CO.,
litunos 'and aldppeza of
C O . L, - -S •
• (I " .I:4ol4l,cilkifrhigh..,l=l44ll:iltZtLoryst Gip, ,
WHITE.. AND RED,eH .*MCIAL.S.
. . .
(Pt. Men . rill; •
• IPH WIIACVE4: I , Ellzabethistet, - • •
• I,Jersey eltr4 - .
• (20t Walnut Street, PljchnlelOnia.
• 1 111 Broadway, New
- 15Daknelit.;- - .l4oatun.. Jan - 1;'70-4-
J bovkr.;{ WY.
DOVEY & KENDRICK, -
Risen sadalppers. 441 the Itbratel
Shaft 'or . flaintkoVi -an Keystone
•
C O= A 4.4 S.- .
Whirr lfa 21.1*2 111e1uxend,
rialadellohla-11911 pock 01x . 014.. • 1
Pottsville—Centre Atreet.
4 / 1 1lcas: noirloos—No. 17 Doan* St, J/ 11 . 31 ; " , 11
A 1 7 , 11 1.
t-7-
W addligtea, . —llsnrjr.J9lacs, Ago •
1141.
Port litiononb.
Pier' No, 17, Poe!. gietutisaiL.
AUDENRIF.D. NORTON . & CO.,
!diners and Shippers of
FIRST CLASS COAL,
LOCUST 31101INTAnt. .
From Our two large and celebratedi.lotiterlea
"HJIL[L S" • F NORTON 4 (xi
4 41X13TINESTAL," Oi/ODRIDGE Q I,arDENR:EI)
Free Burn ing
.Red AO, andßidendltl Pieparation,
COLKETT COLLIERY, Owen, Long & Co
)ADDLE CREEK COLLIERY, C. Colkett,Preet.
ENTERPHL4E COLLIERY , T4tauraglier, Ares'.
~ • -
LoettstAtoo n n and torberry. ale:kyle Salley I k 111
Canal, to all poloteaenvedble by boats.
328 Walnut Street, Philadelphia.
Ode's: { 111 +Broadway. New Tort.. •
• SY Boone Street, Bootee.
J. T. ACIA:ISIBIED, C. F. MORTON,. • •
CHAS. D. NORTON, It. GORBELL: .
Jan. I, '7II. .
•
P17; 1 -910. 11. Pt. Me Itittema.
SNYDER .8z SHOMWEEIR
El!llppere..awd - Dealers Ind
'- • - C 0 A. 9
toz.z W. NNYDILIrs WILL, KNOWN
PINE FOREST , COAL
2:6 WALNUTS?, U 63 TN.INTIT BUILDING; •
PIIILADA. ' -Nror Yglut.• •
LOUIS SNYDER. C. B. SHOE3tAKEIL
Jan 1. 10 - • :1-ly •
. Pler . No. 13 Port likbaseed. '
02090 e 6. RICPPLIKR, t. P.00 . 111D0314 H. P. WEPPLIEL. ,
REPPLIER,GORDON - & CO'
MIXERS
AND lINIAPICTUVOI
'
Locust-Mountain,. Mammoth Vein; Red Ash,
. • ---, Loam?, and
- TOWER CITY, LYKENS VALI-EY COALS,
(329. Walnu t Street, 'Phnadelphle.
Mires: 111 Ilroadlircw, (Room No. 19 . 314wArarlr.
27 Doane Street, (Boom Barteli.
march • 10. • 13=.
Pier 14, South. • -..-i .
. .
BORDA,-KELLER & NUTTING,
', Miners .and Shippers .of Coal, ..
**EsT LEHIGH GRE&WOOD, ,
' TAMAQUA SHAFT, . -- •
REEVII , IDA LE, ' `
ECK ERTLORDERRY .4- • ;
• - - NORTH FRANKLIN RED * ASH,
- : BLACK HEAITI,,
' BIG. RUN LOCUST WT., ,- -
, GARRETSON, GIRARDVILLF
. }at% Kilby St., Bestow.
Mfteem : Room 64 'Trinity Bulldl ,N. Y. •
. 347 Walnut St .M,'PYiladslphta.
: . \ • - . .
Tier 11.
. ,-.•-. .
-. BORDA, KELL= At ItITITING: • •
NORTH FRANKLIN WHITE .ASIL. •
April 21, 'St , •-,;._ 17—
. .
•
. Nark: •
•
-.7 - ' •
WU. iIKiii 4 ENEW/711.1.. .1011. N L. SmanEsiturrict...
• WM.: HEISSENTITTEL. & CO.,
Shiptiens and Whatepalelicnicra
• . .
a Lehigle and -- Cumberland
0 0 -A
7 ; 111 ; NITI T L DINO, ti" lIIWAY.AVAY, Room 81,
. P. O. &ix 'Wig, MAN YORK.'
• f3oTP.Aqcids -far ?icw Yinit taut ;Vicinity far th e
Sale of LEF, ORANT CO.'S PlLtaki ILIDOE., truce'
AAS 3 IIitENI7.MVS ; TURKE k - MTN-COALS. -
marsh :N. '7O •
,
CO.,
CALDW.ELL, CONAIiT ..&
NO. lit BROADWAY, NZW
(lamas 33 and 36 Trinity itinitatir:).:::.7
TIVOLI:HALE DEAL LUX .IX - •
LEHIGH, AVIIiRENBARRE, •
. PrrTS'rON, RED-ASH, •
• MAHANOY, SCRANTON, • ._
LOCUST (IC-NTAIN,
CUIIRERLAND, BROAD TOP, ETC.,
;:. •
- I_, - -'8• '
SiPLE - . AG TR for New York- and the North - 4,1'
the celebrated COUNCIL RIDGE FREE BURN.:
ING LEHIGH CVAL. • TILE PRI:UW*3,E. ,THE
POWELTO.N Svuti-httumirioosCarid•otlwf non--rate
COpiorirs. - • - . ,
- JAMES W. CATADWELL., V. 131 CpNANT.=,
..- . '
' .WAXTER. WWTON.: . '
'April 3, 'eV • ,-
.. . ....; ,-- 1,4
. .
'-OFFIOE OF T E NIAGARA Etil7AT
-ING 8 COMXP:RCIAL BLocx. Hu krAtp, N. Y.
:COAL. • COAL. . COAL.
•THE NIAGARA ELEVATING CO., having a
large surplus of Lot and Dockage, will be prepared
at the opening of navigation to receive from the Erie
Railway, Canal, or Lake, any quantity of COAL for
• storagp o ortntuahipment to any plata. East by Canal
or wcat by the Lakes, upon as (avant/le term( many
Parties in • Britralo. • Thcir lot 18 well located for a
general city business!.
CYRUS CLARKE.; Vice-President.
'OD • 13—if
-- .sctfuglitill gountu.- -- f r •
~
(
-,- d,k NI E S J., C 6 37 1•1 N. E . It, 1
Miner and Shlpper of the Celeinated
/ ,-
LOCUST . MOUNTAIN COAL:
• pcyrriviLL.,j3cHliyl.KlLL•CO., PA.,'
40'1, - 14, - • • - , • I— ', --
liilmington; u n .f`
, ,
.
OFFICE or: TtEE - MOCANAGICE COAL
COMPANY: No. WO 'and 501 W. FrontriAL.
• r , '• . WILMI . NGTON., DELAWARE. •-•
. •
•, Weave aim; prepared to toroth)) the Trade, Deal
+,reuud Consumers with our . - • •
ME
•, Celebrated Coal, she •• btocanaque,"''.
And those Intereatell will flud It to their advantage
and economy - to consult nil- company before making
their yearly contracts or engaging cargoes.
slit ppitigirint for the Western market, Erie. '
Eonthern do Itaxrede Grace.
" • " " Easteim • do Wilmington.
N. 1.1.-:-Mao, the: Clover 111111 tall Road and. Mtn
tuinuotta Chat CM'a edits; for the'tnanufacture of
gaa„ (17, caddies 475 c...f. yield,; coke first quality and
percedtate - of ash4inall. May 21, 111-21-Iy,
• •
• - - , pibralittiti •
EAST FRANKLIN - LORBERNY VEIN COAL
r•tr'E.lta . TV.B.ILNICLIN LOBJARAY , COAL
talk now•sold delusively by Menials. ILEPPLI
(.7 . ortnoN cco.. 'who are my tole Agents. Parties
ordering_ from- them may always depend upon get
ting a pure arfiele.
• • 1 No. 329 Walnut St., Philadelphia.
OM CRS: 11l BrottstWay. Room 8, ne. w'YOrk.
• tNo. 'IN Doane street Rodin 3, linstot,.
Jan I, . HENRY 11E14
illitritopt,
~... . .
. .
- . . .. . . .
• IVANTFACTUBED DT • r
. .it)H l l§l A . ROEBLIN 'S SONS, G
- , -4- . TRENTON; NJ.
. •
For !nettled i'lanes. Slitting, Standing Ship Rigging, .
" Plu m 13 „ r l i e d ir t`r:n r e l ii r e L l Verea l" rs ' nu . " .‘
4 Elevators, Tillers, hr
t LA R( *IRE. Rork copts•rA NPLY y
• t . ).N HAND. ' -
Orders tilled iiritip Disisitca;
- For ihringilt, site tad Isist, see ci srliteh:
willtse sent on application. Aug.:,'UD7-3/ tly
TILE 13.0rE •
1 "
.T. • (IF 1 1 :VEitl DFACRIPTIOST }'Oft
Mines; 'cl9es Planes; Stays; ,
BEST QtrA.ElTY,andeit LOWINT Power
: Transniimlim. by --Wire Rope. Flu* prePared and
OrintrWels
C. W. COPELAND.'
ti and fit BEDA DIN p Y. New , York.
~Uly• .
211 . '704)4n2 - . • .7 • •
T
'll43' Sil ittliCr'san zt o aarviaarzto
mu any alfoll/77dldleulty, should without delay
write for pr. HAM - I:OW& N. Treatise . seta free_ to
arty address, It LkCW :[I3AS D.,New
tioritelty. • P. O. Box Old; .oct !Gs .70-2141-21 14-4 t
MUAMOKIN
SE
ENT S.
&c.
El
Whitney,l McCreary & Kemmerer,
lehigh and other First Class
WYOMING. COALS.
Upper
LEHIGH
4 N*lout Ftrert, kSreoat/
.
=mem
=
B. Wi{ITN
*.pt 10,':9
. _ _...
THOIViAS C.- PARRISH,
4 s /PPER /ID DEALER IN
Lehigh;l huylkill And Bitunatitius
- -
-• :, : - • , -
-, 1 _
on ettg i v i rcifig u n g commission Solteltt,l And taken
Ot=MEM!!!!!!
E
May 1, 'OR
...,, LEViriB - 8c ALKINSP '
- lON zu.a AND AIIIPPTIUCtir Tux:
CELEBRATED CAMBRIAN LOCUST MOUNTAIN
. s ' . 1- :
'"
. ° • • 0 .A . . .14 .•
r
On iii 4 , mann! Street. i'idladelphin.
June 1, ID I - . :. MI -IT
• _ _
tilrq Goa
MAOG s 80LAHD..122 CENTS Z 81`..
r.Law Astrinc.sa novas, Porravit.t.s.
Has now -opened a new Stock of FALL & WINTER
• • Goods suitable foe the present season. such as
ISLACIC TER CLOTH. COUSETS.
FHLICHM. TRIMMINGS, - NOTiteNet,, , &c.
Has on band anew lot of
FALL AND WINTER .SACQUES,-
which will be sold cheap for climb. . •.: •
Ladles Cloaks made to' order. 2.:bw Patierzt
,
received. .
LADIES' SUIT! , .
...
: - ~. - LAMES' .surrs ! • -
Latest Styles for .Fall, 187 Q,
In greateiVariety than eat* l'X., •found .elaoyhtere, a.
we make It a•apeelal!": - •. • 4 -
•
.. , ..•
. LADIES' CLOAKS, ~.
In every variety of Cloths: giso. A.trnehwi k : nr.itJul
Seal tiltAn' FT. ; Cloaks, with -liltifix,lke., to witch:
Also; -
BLACK, •SLKS FOR DRESSES
The very best goods at' the ery lowest prices.
A choice assortment at moderate prices.
L. - 13. I . pJI irs:Ny JE Alt
AT R11:1(AlliCABLI" Low Pittcgs:
AGNEW & ENGLISH,
No. —1 CILF.STNTT STREET,
' 'Opp4lte . contlnental Hotel.
- AND 29 SOUTH NTNTH StTHEF:T.
- PHILADELPHIA.
Oct '7O-42-3or • < '
N EW PtiLl, (.100LS!
11 0 11E1{; :CM,I,ADAYI CO.
•
• VA I.l Ts 7(). •
-(ini• In p rt“Cio N: . pkr Mt , ;at teht 1 4 ( WWII L
i•
'O
.7r • . •
A. 11, IF.: ',N ONV ilr: OMP T, HITE.
, .
INotwillistatollug the great difileitllles etinsetittent
on the Enrols-au ivar to - obtain • Choice -French • Fa
brics for Our Fall trade. we.are enabled by placing
ottr ortiers.early flint through our extensive mullet:-
lions in Europe, th'ittfer.ati Unusually hirge IltITll-
bvr of c
. .• ' ' • ' • . .
•- - •
i
. - N.KW • FABRICS, '--,; , •
And ere would e:ateartteular uttent Inn to our i.uperb
elemort mete ;ire gii at vierlety_or texture , of •
. . .
. -.. , ~.
THE 'NEW 'PL.OIII.COLORS,
~ '. . 1 ; ( •
lir`kattst A.lc. sot
, .. . .
A i_.kt-st.:
As It will he I ropiuml.l.le to replenisli our tnoM desi
rable texttires In this market, we would ti•snert folly
,
iN - P4 ( N .
J 3 LA CK,I SI L.S.
of
. 19owil makes, in ull au uy dualities
WHITE-SILKS•AND. SATINS
I=
COLORED
_!LK
every quality—Nrir Ct.lorm,f ,
COSTUNRS:deti OYA G F.
In all the ng_wesi style,"
MOURNING DEPARTMENT
is repleteot , ltii every variety of texture imitable for
mnnrning wear.
• S ICA IV LS,
•
. .
, .
of everrii null ty• and ,wi re both for warmth at el re
Ott 'also to elegant rtyler for Full elre,44. , _ e
• ...
. . ,
•
- .- : NOVICE. ' ' '
•,•,
• .
Wr mbult tglr tvrtilvanttige of tl:r Rearetty .uf de-
NI ruble kpremlr, but .4111freotit fnueto sell our stock ;..t
:MODERATE .ADVANCE.
102 and Ulf Chestnut Street,
Phil4delphia;
:-3rn
RAND RXPOSITIOIF
-
G• • FUR ThE t FASHIONABLE
COIII'LZ OF '2UOt.- M. A;
Oct
No. liot N. W. cot'. Eleventh l et Chestnut Mls., kills
FAi , ll loss FOR TILE From. Asti) WINTER. or UGC,
.. i Wholesale and . , Retail,
whi.-11 Paris and the first inanufactorles - -supply.
' :Dresses, Mantles, Cloaks and Costumes for Ladles
and Children. A special department of plain and;
elegantty, trimmed patterns, of the latest Parisian
and English Styles, at $6 per dozen. Tryon want
a handsomely-tilting, well-made suit, at short no
tice, go to Mmt.•lltstogit's for tasteful tri land ngs and
dainty stitches. Mouralng, Traveling and 'Wee.ding
ontllts. Walking and Fancy Costumes. -•-, t -..
DnE.sS & CLOAK TRIMMINGS. Bt:TToNS, ORNAMENTs.
comprising the latest Paxis novelties In - black and
colored- Fringes, Gimps, Ruches, Loops, Flowers,
Gloves, Bridal-Wreaths, Veils, Ribbons, new shades' ,
in Velvet, Satin and Taffeta Ribbons, Bashes, Neck
ties, MADE UP LACE GooDS—GRAPIDDUCEIENSE LACE
you Duties Tamaxlso. Pointe Applique, Valencien
nes, Hamburg' Edgingatandinsertions, }tae Gulp- ,
.ure and Thread Laces, new.in design and moderate • ,
lit prier.. CHOICE INDIAN ORNAMENTS: Falls, Birds.
Mats, CushOns, MoUcholni. Wire and Fancy Goods,
selected by -Mrs. Binder at Niagara: Elegant Itile -- Or - ?:
Whitby Jet Goods, In sets, Brea.tillns, .EarrlngsL
Necklaces and Bracelets. Splendid Ilne of French
let "GlicAls, Coral and French Gold Sete. Inns,
Sleev'e Buttons; Chs Ins , sc.. which for infector arle
ty In Style, cannot be surpassed. Stmngerse• Mpg.,
1
our city are respeetfully incited to examine. ; .••,4 • ,
ace•Pluking and 4:nattering. .Cuttimrand tlthig. 1
Also, a perfect BN - stein-of "Dress elitU ng laught..kat - •
terns sent by mail di..xptex..ilti all parbkof tbe Union.,
- • —• • ' -.. Masi. M. ta .Vla, DE It' 14 ,
N. W. cor. Elei-e tit 11:1tifttchektfiftt.fiti. - ' PtilLsn'q.
Oct I, '11: —IO-Arn .• '' - • - - - '
N Ew lac;K:i ... . .-.,.. .:-.... - . •
s.
SitEPPARD; - VAN'. HARCINGEN -4
ARRISON: .. '" -.--,
•Zs t - 1.. . • • .. • •.. ,
No , 7l(N)S.44liiknut Street; Vhilada.
....
ti li t espeet folly 41VIle the Went lon of buyers to dielr
Ilrif(''qUil well itic..,oried;:itOck of - ' •:.
- •
~
.N.E GOODS •
All of wlrtelt hate been el tiler - ' . - - -- .
Imported Liditict or Purchabed for Cash at
• Verq Low Prices.
_
Exclusi ve rale don to; anti u long ex perceeee I is. on r
?;:pF;CIAL LIN 9117 LINEN IJOiltrA •
.., WHITE 0 01,75,....`:
•. . tiHUSE FURNISHING bi' LQ.ofra. . .
• cult AINs, CrItTA IN ...11 ATI:MAL. de.
•
•ErlubJe .us toipive our customers manyadvuntagett
'Hol'iefforeed, n ctsewhere, Every 44.4w/11111o:1 of We;
_NEW :MAE Erliof " • t
' gAIISEILLEs QI.'ILTS. COUNTERPANM.
.. 'EW,NNELs.iBLANKETs, 3.IUsLINis, • -
'7 *eIIiETING-tit TABLE- DA.SIA.BKB, NAPKINS:
DOYLIES, FREIT IMYLIES, TABLE LINENS, .
• , TOWELS. T ELINOS. TRA•Y'l.7LoTtils, '
TA BLE CLO IN: C 10,11.61 UNION CLOTHS, ..•
LINEN SUE !NHS, TA BI.E.INWERINtIf.I. .
TABLE and IA NO COVER..4;',‹I'AND COVERR,
IJISIITIES,, tiRETONNF-S, ~ . , • .
FURNITtIit ~ CLIINTZEs. • ' . -
- FURNITURE. COVERINGS • ,
Toll LET L'O_VERS, CRIB 441.
....LINEN PWO H. C 4. 5 1: Eitl .'i.4 GS. MOREENS, • '
` - DAII.I.ASEN,NILK CURTAIN MATERIAL,. • -
SATIN tis Cll es ES, BROCATELI...Di, SATINS,
' - TERRYS, REP'S•PLUSIIES, A . _'
..,,_ ' ' .
LACE CITItTAINI4,OOItNICEIk TASSELS,
' VA; WIIIIDOW 1111.41)Et . S, d. ' -
..
Oct 1 r7O ' , , :l64n i
_..! - -
NDIAN PidWDERYII.LB Orden ter
the above POWlltilt can be lett at t he office, 1111
, rentr! Street . Ito ERT B. It F t ikTll ; or with
tP' - 4CE ON., at the Pennvlvanla
In' Peg ppm pt ty attended to..
It THOMAS WREN i CO.
andsr the army Perfect corn
fort and benem. guaranteed. ISO North Nerenth St.
below ARCIL !Philadelphia. Triune% Supporters.
Elastic Btocklnks, Crutebes. u . Lady attention.;
July 16,
-
PQT : F.,,,S, yILLE,.
,BATUFMAY, :MORNING,. .i . pEm r,,E1,.:4,•,„..1“f3;1(:)7
IN
Elan
=EI
,•8 *ENV — PAT.NT` , RCAPU
Wi t BRACE and CREW isVP
betels.
;1 pENNISYLVABI# 841. LL.
.
• CIVITLL STILT, Pi - fit' !MLLE, PA. * - .
This well known amid popular Hotel, has ben en
-1 ' Orel, - renovated and refurnished, is now open for
pertnaneut and transient borders. ' • I
--,, Him. WARDLE et SON, Proprietons
Ju e 7. .rO—wif . .
tumber
T lIIICHE c t 'LIIIIILBTR! I
TO UNDERTAKERS AND CFIAIRMAKEILS.
We have on hand a large lot of seasoned ' s OVAL
COFFIN BOARD& and POPLAR CLIAIR an 4 SET.
TEE PLANK. The shove Is the best qualltv 'of IN
DIANA LUMBER.' BOAS fb RAUDENIfiEtiII,
July M. '7O-31-tt oor. 4th & Spruce 14t4.- Pa
--
lIMBEIV ILUMBER!L
- .7 4V,n0u FEET OF I , ‘"EiTEIt.N LUXEEIt,
'BOAS 4ii; 12.4..1_7.1:1E:11-IU/414.
Corner 4th and Spruce Ste., Reading, Pa. '
Wed.teep coiudantly on ludo' Allchlean Panel. In-'
dlaua Walnut., Poplar Chair Plank, 71i Pop'es, , ,and
Ash Lumber, all seasoned. The Walnut rune from
12 to 32 inches wide and all thlcknessea, and the n
Poplar from Li toll Inches wide. The uallty ?of the
•Walnut and Poplar ea unot.beati • In any mar
ket, and we ant selling lower. titan the city market.
All parties In want of anY kind. of Lumber would
do well to call and examitireour stock.
July 9, '7O
MILLERSBURG . STLIVI SAW
ING
N. C., FRECK & CO ,
ALANCTACTIMERA AND DEALEIbi
•
.•
LUM - -BE-R4
.1/1 Kinds o f Rat 7/mbar net to
••
frame Lumber. Bowl., 14a,4114 . Lath, strippii ng .
fail ogles, FLoortug„ 8,11116g,;' Sash. Doors. •
31GaldIng. , ' • .
•
All kinds Of Manufacturing Lumber; oonstant!y
on band.
'While Pine. Hemlock and Oak boards cut any
length. Our Mills are 70 milesbelow
being a saving of f 3 50 freight per 1000 feet. Orders
tilled prouiptly. Pelee list fu rnitilned oti application . .
Jul).; 9,'7u - • 2S-thuo
Slide ants. ft
L'OR HALOS.—A now and prat-elikiii TOP;41( BUJ
-- Terms reasonable. Apply .to •
May 7. '7U-1941 WM. R. SMITH; !Centre St.
-
1 7 0.9 KZ N T.—Two Ofticesiin Rum ors tatter Build-
Inc corner Second grid Maltantottgu Streetx.
A.pply- to iIk:INKY C. RUSSEL, Rent Exude Agent.
18 Alattantongu Street.
-
March
FBENT.,—STOIM ROOM with dwelling at
.l; tachoil, in fhoingwon's Row, on Market-iitrort,
atiov6 Centre. giNc•ti lautuodlarely. For
tennis apply to L. C. THONIPSON. .
July 30, 70-31.11 , . .
FOB BALE O $ T*) LET.—A. Piece of GROUND.
etwt4tlnlng about : AeltEs, With the. bulldlnirs,
vltuate In Tumbling Run Valley, tit - 0 miles front
POttmv I Ile. ' A ppl v . to r ~ .. . ,_,
Jos. WALK ER, oti the yretrilv4.s.•
Ikg 29, 19.44-stue • ' ~:". • . =
IRON WORKS! /BON WORKS! •
• . • FOR BALE Ott 113 LEASE.
Thelfilluyikiltßaven Direct Iron Wnrks are offer
ed fur tallestt halftteir original cbst, or will be leasrd
for a term of years to responsible parties. For terms.'
apply to (MARL YS WiLTROITT, Trustee,
lk-t. 22. 'tichuylkiI Haven.
FOE BA.LE: , -1 pair Breaker Itoliti;:14 in. with bed
&dm de.; 6 ft. hoisting drum.; .11 - R. essteen, 2j ft.
long; counter screens, salute gates, Shute'-'fats, dust
ers stack and plate, and a lot of mine nisteldnery . ;
will' be sold cheap. Apply at
JOHN It. DII.:H311: Cowl Yard
June -70-23-tr • 'C al St ., Butnecille.
LEASE.—The ealuaLle. tract of Coal Land
known as Robb drKinebrener Tract, late SRl
for.l, situated In _Blythe and Selluntklll Township..
.rontalninf about :tkl .acmf, ogered for was,
upon reasonab e terms. Apply 10. •
= F. It. HANNAN, Agent,
Feb Z. k•tt Pottsville or !Int Carhon.
LATE! SLATE!! SLATE . I I . - •
The undersigned Iwo always 'on hand a, large
of ROOFING HLATEI,. of all sizes, and of
the best•Oallty„ which he will sell al the chestiest
prices. The slate 'earl, be delivered by Railroad or
Canal. Apply to 'WM. KALRACII., -Agent.
flamOtirg, Berk, Co., Pa.:
• . •
i) ° A l f . tp . i t e i n l iFld PlW lric Z u l 7, occupied
T 110.4. T h e
ILANCROFT, In Ashland, Pa. Dwelling . '
OlUcc, Cirecii and - Ice iloußesc llot, Bede.
&c. The dwelling Ie eotnpnratively new; end has all
the modern convenleucee.Price low .stid term
rw.y.' A ptily .to .H EitS It LTA:4 EL, •
• Beal Estate Agent (Pt tong° St,
May IS; '76—V--41'
-
SALE.—OneDonble Bre:alter tor aAsh
Red
.6 - (kilt lery. all complete and as good as new; with
40 horse engine, butlers, hoisting gearing for plstfe,
&e.
Oue 12 ft. fan, 8 horse engine and bol lertvone five
lon hay - scale. ' • .
250 I eel boring riavls with bits,4e., &Win complete,
ordeir.
. Also, a set .othoisting gearing tar slope, pipesand
other art lel eS. A mgly to C..... 16.1." ILL. Agent,
180 Ventre street , Pottsville.
. - ATagnst 6, '170.32-tf 7 A - - Litiew-tf,
FON SALE.-zA Farm of MO acres with iinprove
men tot and stock, sl taste =Abe line of the Schuyl
kill and Susquehanna Railroad, 14 miles from Potts
ville. 10 ;scree of the land are under cultivation, 75
acres oovcred with chestnut aprouta of l& years
ghlwth, which would make excellentprop timber.
25 iferea are onvered with beams timber. Thelmpmve-'
merita consist of a substantial house, $ neer Steles
'Barn; out houses, and & new saw mi ll with water Pow
er. Stock Consist& of _horses, cows, grain, hay,-and
if rming implements. The price asked can be real
stied from the timber alone.. Terms easy. Apply to
JOHN X. SHEA PEHEatterty's Building, Ptatsville;
or to FERO pi o..pwriqtritAß No. 1801.entre street,
Pottsville. . • • August 7, '64-42-tf
VALUABLE PROPERTY FOB , BAIJR.
' TFIEBUILDING ; AND PREMISES
formerly ocenpleFl by ,the, •
SCHUYLI4ILL COUNTY LUMBER
consisting of large brick and stone shim, with
steam power and tools for
PLANING and .MANUFACTURINOIX3fBER.
with lumber Sheds, abundant yard room, and otter
conNienleuces for alarge !Amine:at. This propertkla
situated to the Sonoran orPorravita.k, and frontson the Railroad, and Is otheewlse well located'.' .
- Will beaoLp Low-and upon easy terms of p‘yrael.,
• • Apply to JOHN L. POW, Pottsvllli , ,To; ;
• or, P ( YTT, 2.'15 a ft. Vernbn St,
Sept 10, - 70-41741). Phliadelpida.
•
I.;ORSALE—THEHE FOLLOWING
• ?LiNISO . 11AeHISEHY.
One Flee Ton. Lqcomotlyaonintble for 4-ibot gunge'
road.. Has been lined - for srlinNejing coat and coal
dirt at .the ruines,-and: Is in good order. •
Alan—Two Horizontal - Pumping -Enttnea,
cylinder e feet stroke. - wlth. getiting and - bobs, and
two MU of pumps 40u, yards auclkLwith 14-1116 h pion=
gem, tu feet stroke. and two of pump* SO yards
each, one In-Inch: ther!other 'l4-inch plunger, each 7
feet stroke,
A tsq—Ohe Winding Engine.l2-Mck
stroke, with drum-genting. and bolters complete.
Also—Four sets Brelaker illachlnery. •
Also-100 three-ton - Slope -Wagonaeheaelly Ironed
(or four feet track.
Also—Pne 16 feet Fen and Engine. 'with tubular
boiler complete.
The above machinery4bia been In service. but is
In good working order. .
GEO. W. SNYDER, Pottsville, Pa.
. ,
Jan 9, 4li;--2-tt
.. - -
F °A BALE
•
8 1An (inn woRTIZ Oi? mrsiv*Aci.
5a..”..,, , k,..., , ti CHIN,EBY of all DASSIUMONS.
.
1 ninety horse engine, 20 In. bOre,i'&,,ft: strOlie.l7Blll.-
fly wheel t shaft, It inollartist.ilitipm. ilhaft4 :Oti ip...
- diam.xl4 ft.:long; pump wheel , l - 1 i'LAtard:l6.
the face, 4 in._Pitch. with bOb"nll4tPK:ll/P...
has been use..l to run a 33 In. ,primp..... • ,-- • ~ • -..., -,..
_.i I sixty horse engine, 18 1=•b0re,..6 •fr, tOke,. 1.9.' ft.
' fty wheel, with pump Wheel,' shafbeedi all Connec
tions; 1 drum 10 ft . diem., tel tti a %iron ht Iran shaft;
if
- 1 large double breaker - with Skl,h engine'.
1 sixty honse engine, bOk'bect plate, • 6 lee% stroke;
with nil the pump gearing attached..' 6 •' . .
1 ninety horse engine, 20.1neb bore, &feet stroke.
stearrquiri ,11-14 1... cyl., 2ft.stroke li in. pole, with
expanslcm,joittfa. Islet of heavy cOnegearing..w.th i
pushing trucks•and wire rope.'• ,
2 — drift cars, 40.1 n. gauge.: .4 drift tare, 311 In. sou ;e.
45 ' drift cars, 46 in. gauge. 5
Several I dump large'crlal=i l s, Rome. ,
genre as the ~.P,lk ,'
_ . .4 H. ihlt. • '
trucks. 000 feet Wire rope, different sixes.`. A lot or
blacksmith Was, anvils, vises,---bellowa,4c. A lot
of second hand . belting ; various' s i ze s. 30 tone of
second hand 1' rail.- - .7 second hand Injectors in good
order. 240 yds. 16 in. eoltinni_plpe; 100 yds.-201n.
column pipe; I 20 zin..._nole ; - ,:dftp t 2.- 16 In. pole
pumps; . I locomotive,,,
_4llfiremsnltablefor shifting
, cars, or on an iron ore - bank. ..!4: zuwe t*.wood wOrk'of
2 breakers, blaelcsanilli.and lithops. One
blowing tub suitable for' laws " .
-ninety horae.tnenes. with bolts and. lag-
V asty . r' gs . , -„,' - sin complete.
I fifty horse ergine t •• 18 feet ho isting dr3m.'
. . ..
2 thirty "
I twenty-flue " " ,
6 Roller' , SI In. x 3 n ft.
" :to in.'t 21 It.
•1 •• 20 In. x 311 ft.
2 '•• 21 In. zl2 ft..
2 •• 21 In. z 0 ft.
1 •• 12-borse, tabular,
upright due holler.
2 - new bollers,2lln. z 80
2 _l".. " SO z3O ft.
108y'ds201n.uultnikplEe.
150 " 181 n. •
380 yds. 14 tn. erd,
with bons and rings.
114 yds.loln. notninn pi*
100 " " " "L
-1 Lot of 4 plpes. -
1231 n. pole Pump.,
218 ••- •
3 11'" " " -
8 " ":
• .-
1 1411611 ft puteptusaa . o
10 mill. lift ...Lad tyros
'Amor ebslnorwious
.1.10 feet holgtl44 dram.
. At the Mactiar4ol7
2Ftimr. 13. 'lll-411-tf
C
W.A.S7Ii.—AU Vedas ei otirrket
%.• CLRANINO WARTS brewed for Miners; Ma.
0 liable, and for Railroad oar; All orders received
by mail will be promptly eideodad in. , • •
it. a. HURRY teCO •
• HS, iii 4 a LYl,leorth Prowl Street. Plated pbie
...woe IL lb-illiple4i •
111711., , •- E. 0.. RAIBPSIL • 1870
OSIOSALERMAII with JACOB TOWEL a
wthi Dry Glooda. - No.. till UMW ill., Phila.
. X. IL—All orders Soti Om* *i n intended Ow me,
, -plasm address 141. C. -Harper, cam at Jamb .11ligal •
Gra. No. all Marketllt.. Matta. '• Jan 111.70-1•1141,
ME
ICE
ME
• By our system of Seltasiuntrement. *
- , essily understood. we "unstas customers ,
.":4o send their orders in *eh litly as to'
•.--.-41EGI7Rp. .GOOD WIT es though
they cainertheasselves to our Zstablish
_ Merit. , • . •
Ottf ImprOred - Rules for Self-lissauro•
mint. Samples and Prices sent when re.
quested, and.PROMPT ATTIONTION
_ even to si4 orders, with pu.luzyuvrimi
.4sr entire setae: diction:
30133 WABAjAIEB,
_
• 818 and 820 ChestiivirStreilt,
.1 • • • V PIIILADEAGPIXIA.
Octote_twta
- • •
ME
1
l; a:
I stack S R diazlO ft long
2 istackl , :11 1n.x30 '•
S 14M1* Aplicejplate„, to It.
10nz,4
[Jot of pump stubs.
I new It ft eshaustnig fan
boy
p
Of„1 tn, haul boty
Pump wheels,*,sharts and
- blocks td various sizes.
1 small foot lathe. Fire
fronts. steam and water
pipe* for boilers of differ
ent sixes. constantly on.
hand. 1.50 - tons east scrap.
fA tons,wroaght scrap. 2
sets tkf breOter rolla, 2 4
fL ,ser , wit. 2 drums for
Cat chains, Lot of Entr e ,
Ugh flat chairs', Wont Tan
feet.' Lot ascii6d hand
sheet iron— Boilers or: all .,
aineCtuade at the shortest
notice., Aliesra4m hand
bailer*, Is in:'andao ,
It n r s
ia*
tal Coal,eAnteL.
JAB= iIir.A.RIZR,;
4 _,,
• Districtr
Countat &bit
Cotbing,
POS. THZ
- PRESENt SEASON, •
We have destined and rusuntsetured a large
stock of the
,F=amser "
RIMMIDE MINIM
:WhICII we warrant to be,. .
AS FINE AS CUSTOM WORK,
Ip a II reapecui.
\
_..------ Our preparations for ---.'
\
. \the present season
\ ---, \ have been on the hr
.:
' gest and-most libe
\,
.ral scale, and alir
lt
-1
-present stock is
G en t s , - •
as`
Buperior to
1 ?) 0 ; any. former
TMLOW one at our
00 OD t. 1 60 fbrzber ones_
Pinest, in have; Wei
quality, of superior
'the greatest . po" t° , th ,M e
variety, and up 0 115 0 . p " ''''''—'
houses.
to the very West, .
fashion ankstyle.
Enibraeing every-
thing essential la a
gentlemen's toilet and °
wardrobe. .. -V P
\,
CUSTOM DE FT, , , •
.
Goons of our - csorn impor- /
tation:—the siaweit, and
beet fabrics of Engliab,
French. German; and
Home Slanufactnre. 4,
The most skillfs9 8048,'
=diesels rhiladel. • w sue I
phis. "Style'? end/ i ionum i
'toad workman.
il i olos
shill. A. per. ' ohildrenl,
feot fit st . tar- ,
6
ant4e.d.
with
:man
satiate°.
.. i ~
......... .
other re. Many new styles
'pmts.
In - ado up in the -
g,/ ti t /most elegant man
,
,/ ' net, and securinglhe
. 4 1 7 •
/ • qualities of durability
' / and strength, so desire.-
, ‘ \ \bleln Childrene-Cinth
\ ' ing: We have' made .
i k t i ' \ t o. : \ s 4it c idl; efforts in
' this department,
an
01 0 '
' , d ask special
U 1 U \ attention to our
... AND
. \ , ?II" \ stook. Twen
''', iy-five styles ~..
. 820...0,\ of little
'OVEit
-15•• ;COATS -
Che,stsrat St. _
PHSAbkLPHIA.
, ~
4,\
~....- \- , s„
wit k ,
-
. _ .
161
NOSE:•
PLAVN FACTS :*
WORT&
► 41)1NG.,
rge, welrestablished and
ful business, with•an ex
-
e of nitre than twenty
' rs, enable us to offer
cents. to all who . are
become pi rchaiers of
e \..
succ
perien
• five
,y •
induce
about t
C/o/hi/is:l;x. ,
no: establishment in
i . Our gaiinents
f the best materials:,
.leced; nothing
"any'' way:imperfect _
at_ all, evo in the
:s'of-good.i. It is 1,
fact among
otir, Ready-Made
every. ,thing that.
a. superior gar-
squalled by any
in Philadelphia.
leni is so large
every one can
without delay.
ialwayS guaran
7oWer than the,
. iffe have
nest of .
"second, t
the coun.
nll mide
carefully
sound or
u
lowest gr
a ivelr esta
clothier4,th
Clothing, i
goes to to
• ment, is u
• - stock of goo
Our asso:
and varied till
be fitted at om
Our prices ar
_ teed as 10w,.0r
lowest' elsew,liel
:@so' - a fine Assoil
Dir . -Goods it
which will be ma(
in the: best ma
prices much lo
usually charged
made to order. '
Samples of go
lists for all
_kinds 6
for Warded by 'mail
when: requestecl,
forself-nir
;garments, either
or -seleded. froi
Made - Stock,' fa
'Press, guarant(
- rectly...
Persons not
can.when
). WI and have tl
gistered on our
•
that purpos e ; •
:...rnents can be
fituie
_
BENNiur & e
Tower -lid: 4 5 18 Mark
. Itqf-wa,y betweelp.#9lLi acrd Sisa
-PHIL:4I:4 LP,FfIA I
ikt rk;:o-42"-thir ; • •
Cy. IL SS - 43231. • W. P. BA X
ottippro: CARPETS i , o3.4tx`: iwrs
rum A.9.4ORTMENI—AIack Oa etats. F .
•
: • fh:s4oets, Ropy inigrour iikarits. - '. •
, • , thair 'Rods,
- - .
G;.B. SNYDER & CO
NO.
34 South Second, St, PhliadelPikbi6
icerr aloNllimon,lktA' 'mgr.
disolunt to &arches and clergy
loan. Oct 6. '7O-11-3nattlats
Naga Otlpitses DlitelletptfestFaytraala. • r
. .
yE can have no • better opportunity. to
publish the - following very curious
narrative of what might have been:. We re
ceive it from a correspondent of high areplita
lion ; and it will be seen that the story is no
piece of gossip, but is-vouched for by author
ity where there seems no room for error. • •
When in Rome, a year or two since, we 1
occasienallyirisited an English Mend whose .I
pleasant apartments, under the brow of the
Pinciati Hill, were made tht.m - bre attractive
,by the interesting.,etorieali end experiences
which-we were always.surelo hear-from him.
As we parted one evening; be said; "The
nexr - time you come, I must tell: you re story
.which will. be worth , your hearing; on ae-.
-counttof its biographical interestand authew
call; and
The time , was arranged for our next
and he promised the; following narra
tive..by speaking of the venerable personage
-who communicated it, and the circumstances.
under which the eommunication was made
to hini. He furthermore furnished us with.
paper, pen and ink, and wished us to record
it from,his mouth as he should repeat it. He
gave u4.liberty - to publish it for the informa
tion of others Irbetiever w might see fit to
do se. We shall orilywith iold the naree - of
our authority, on account o ' the connections
existing between .himselfri nd certain rela
tives
tives of the family Whose names appear in
theseivel. He said, that, Some Yeats since,
when heyas'yisiting his friend, the late Dr.l
Ilawtrey; Provost of Etori,who was at tint(
time; although advanced in years , sound in
._mind and in apparently good health, the
:doctor said to him. "I. - wish you, Augustus,
to listen attentively to what . l aril now about
to relate,' , and to record niystatemenf, in or
der that the facts may he forever preserved
and remeMbered.. They 'have now become
of historical Importance and value. I re
ceived th'eni from the parties of whom ! shall
sixiak, and to whom I arlll fist cousin. ' I
know
-them to be True. They are not known
tothe world. - Perhaps they remain alone in
my breast. Tint 'l, wish you to make a
memorandum , of them,- mi. in the order. of
,Providence, I shall not lon i g-;remain among
men. My -:friend, record 0 them. Three.,
weeks. atter*ards,the good Provost of Eton.
• was dead. The „late Dr. ilawtrey was •wel - 11 -
known and esteemed in
.thli highest circles of
'English siielety.- My inf
re i rmant is equally
well connected, and his, atives are among
s3me.of the moat respectable of the.' prelacy .
and nobilityof England. -1 - . - _ ;
• Having prernised'ell ire iished to 8 ,1 Y; the
moist important Of which • •e have lieubstan
' tiallystated,.lie began and' tided' the follow
ing remarkable Story Which we here record,
from his dictation t : I '.
"Within the memory of many elderly per
sons now living, lived the well-known Coup=
tess de Solis, distinguished for many.extraor
dinarypersonal • gifts,—Tor her, great beauty,
her splendid talents, her varied • acmimplish-,
shuts, her.brilliant eon veniation, and, above
all, her unerring :power of repartee. In her
youth, • this lady,. had • been Miss Foster,
daughter of an •Itr*li bishop ;
- but her mar- -
-liege - with An Italian count, had separated
her from - herown family, and subjected her
to a life.of great suffering', and many even
said Of cruel persecutioii., • Niter inanyyearia,.
the Countess de - Salls returned once more to
her paternal. home.- She wiiS terribly altered
in mind and . ..marktT - er.. 'T.he ;Sufferings - she
Mule nilergone keeintsi, to 'have left an eter
, nal stamp upon her apirlial ,and, her great
. mlenjtal depression•ivas•gridnally undermin
ing her - health:. Many eminent physicians
were consulted; and;,for. n long tinfe - 0.11 was
• ; in vain. A terrible nightmare, and the
- scenes in which she had 'lv i ed with and suf
fere4 from her husband, pursued her even in
• herwak i rig moments. At- length her medi
cal advisers, as a strange and desperate re
sort; urged, as lhe-memo of. those scenes
could never' be eradhieted, - I ry
that she, should
visit•• them -once, more in. the hope, that
stamped with a fairer impress, and visited
under happier auspices, their . vision might
cease to be injurious. ' L ' .
•'• "Madame de Salls.utterly refused td return.
to Italy, unless her youngeralater, Miss Fos
ter, Were permitted to accompany t her. Her
society alone, she said, could-banish_gloomy
recollections, and cheer
.her exile. -• But old
Doctor and Mrs. Foster would net - allow their
daughter toleave - them. , Their eldest daugh:
ter's marriage with a foreigner had pearly
broken their hearts;. and-,1 if. their second
daughter did, the same, 1 they would be
brought down - in sorrow .to the grave, . But
Madame de Sills gre w wonie and worse; and
at.length her ParenTiivere induced to con
sent to her wishes,.efter exacting a promise! .
that. she would iti . ker, under any...circum
stances, permit hpOster'slmarriage with a
.
• foreigner.: - ' ..,•:. ; •
... "Madame de-Sa and 3i as Foster went to.,
1, 1
Florence. *where t et 'bright' sunshine. - and
• Itallawsleies, combin d.with the affectionate
'lsoplety`? ot her 'slid r, soon! had•si beneficial'
effect on. the health of 4,ll6)Countess. • Their
saloon was the ey,ening resort of all - that wee;
mest distinguiaked end intellectual in the
:kiciety of ,Florence; - and -the return of •
Madame- de Sills was Warinly:welcorned in'
. Tmicany, -where her yirttieti ' were already
- Wel l lenown„ .especially since her charms
• 1
.
( younger
, enhanced by , the- Orefience• of her
- Yelinger sister„whose e traction's, blooming'
into a ,beautiful worn' hood, ',were even,
superior to her own. 43- y were - the suitors
who proposed for ti - 'hand of-Misi Foster;
but to most of them She turned an unwilling
' ear; and ill were promptly ' dismissed by the
,guardian care of the Countess. - who was ever
•
mindful Of the proinise she had' made to her•
aged parents at home.' 'At hist a -young Ital
ian, Count M.--,-- (in 'the Vitardio notC/C of
the Pope,l showed an evitifint.devotion. to the
society
. ot Miss Foster ; nd Madame - de,
• Sails, though feeling s'incere regret at-hailing
'to act thus to a .man she both respected and
admired,- not only forbade 'him- -the house,
but, to prevent the possibilityof future-meet
ings. she remcived her stater to Rome.
- "At Rome, the arrival 4,the sisters was .
-' greeted with even greater ['enthusiasm thaw
— at Florence. Butthe Con 4ess cibserved with
• --antiety, that'• her sister's,bealth failed from
"helium of her change or residence,—failed
so seriously and' rapidly t at at length abet
I to
felt obliged to put to herse fthelerious ques
- thin, whether it was bette to obey her par
ents, and allow her slater o die, or whether
she should disobey her pa ' , and save the
Ufa and happiness of. her ster. In advocat
ing-the marriage of. Miss . oster With Count
I .M---, the Countesii - felt se Could do so from
.. ,e9nselentlinis motives. Se therefore - wrote,
•
two letters,;= , ene :to 'the $ oung • guardsman,
1 1
:telling him that.he might come brick and see
her again, and one: to her old parents,
— gently hreaklng to them: ti e fact, that, before
-their answer
_could arrlye,, hir sister would
alread,y probably be marr i tl to a foreigner;
but that in Count X-- t ey would find a
i
ss
very different -Son-In-law from their former
one ; and
_that, fn. order t realize . what' he
was, theY , mustdraw fort ernselves a mental
picture of all that Count - e Solis had been,
and thin imagine exactly • e reverse. * ,
• "Count M— arrived,,a d was accepted by
the beautiful Miss Foster. The Wedding-day
fi
Was-xed'; the weddliipd was made; the
•
wedding breakfast was, p pared.; the,Wed
ding-guests were invited 'l'hen the letter
ft.sttil
was sent to old . Doctor an Mrs: Foster,—too
late for their answer to co e back in time to
forbid the marriage. Tb ceremony : on Was to
-take place in the churl , of St. Luigi dei
.Fran6exi. Gin .the wed ing-morning, , the'
church was filled-„With tort. - Madame
de Sails and Mins, Foster idled at the altar
for the bridegroom (a r. the fashion of
Boma tt t brides); , but the bridegroom never
- came:,-, 4hey waited and; they waited; -but
he lief r came. And he , never, never aline
stall :-Andohe never was heard of any more
frdin that day forward.
.1 - . _
4.
-.. 4.
t
-., , 1,- . ' ' - •
' "Many years after th events, Occurred
be great ramble and pest lence of thellasill.
, -eats: All who were rie enough to- do so,
packed up all and left-th Jr homes ; :rind the
podr wee le ft to lookout i for themselves. A
I le
bishop.of the region hap ned' to 'be' -absent
Au. .Switzerland when ' t e pestilence broke
out; and, _on hearing of-t e sufferings of his
flock, he fastened home ards: He gave his
.tune to the' sick, and hi means to the fa,m. , -
lihing. lie sold all he id,—his carrictim .. ;:
his • honks, and his tibia y; and, at last, 1*
sold the bishop's ring
. f m his fingef,:and- ;
r l etr
with the proceeds the f he' fed the poor;:,
' Nfter the famine and leuce in the Baidik
cats had died away, is orb of self-deVii, '
don were 'reniembered -InF high quarters at.,
Rome; and -fie result Twee, that be was
"eventually created a cardinal, long before, lie;- -
cinild otherwise have hiiped to 'attain that'
dignity. •
"When Pope Gregory XVI. lay wren his
death-bed, the
-greatest d Meulty• prevailed as 2.
•to finding a -successor. All the avalirktde
'cardinals were•either -too old, or bent too
'strongly to one ixilitisuail party or another.
The person of greatest influence In thatlmost
difficult timenras Count Rees!, the French
.rim
4
lmsador,Whoisii•well known -liberal opin,'
• riths-lonacie m remitanxious fOr a liberal .
rope. For this i
Pope looked, and looked
I
in. vain. At -length'lt so happened,:thit,
o
~ walking in the street, bit eye fell 0,04 he
' aliet ditair 'bishop,
t.
w was accidentally
rig. t hrough Horn at that, momenat Rossi feltand hoped that in-him •he
,had found thriman. ha sought for; 'and all
hie influence wiaturnsid 'in , this_ most 'unei-
Mated _direction. By they n 4 of Count
Road; the bishop was elected a,ge Pope ;. And on
• the daphe mounted din papal throneas Pius
'IX., he revealed that he-waik - the same 'per= :
son, Who years before, las Count lifaritli-Fer.'
• sl - ~, _ ,
.Plece;v4l
up to order, •
ner, and it
than are
r ganpents •
with price
garments,
t any time
• - •
mstruc-
ER
THE POPE IN•11:1N-YOUTIL
Teta; had limo eagiged,to marry the beadti
ful Miss Foster. -
"Seized . by Jesuit relations on' the morning
of the marriage, hurried to Atilt:eon a Jesuit
mission, ail letters. being Intercepted on both
aides, be had lost sight for years of his devo
tions. Miss °Foster, lived to know the
end" o.lever she had loved and !ad."—
Olif and New, for 24'invn1ber. _
T4E
rrliTS morning there 'earttitiblis a legal.
•
..L gentleman of the eity;wbb, Contrary to
his usual,practice, had lost his temper. u- .
deed, he seemed so much - out of humor,
we thought soMetbing • out of the u
course--very far abut-had
,transpired to
trouble him. 'Said the gentleman, and he
said it very brie Idy4 as if - he meant it:—"l
want you to give 'this* baggage-inefi thun
der."____:. • ' • • .
TheTitentleman surprised us; we attempted' .
' to explain to him - that men . were,
on the whole, a - pretty .set of' fellows,
that they had their trials and -grievances,
like the rest of,manitind, and that if they
oceasliMally )ost their temper it was not en
tirely their fault; but the , legal gentleman
broke lft upon,ts with the exclamation that
he don't care shout their temper. "They
are a ebnfounded stupid pack,. and they
ought tole kieked,.every one of them."
WC - stopped him as soon as we could, 'add
then asked_ him _what under-the sun was
1 the matter." -=
"I'll tell you," he Said; ."arid then If you
dOtil say that I owe these baggage-men a •
• grudge' or the. trouble their carelessness has.
caused me, I'll not say another word.!'
.• "A few days ago I had My valise packed
and went oft to Madison to attend 'a case.
'Upon returning, .my valise was: given.
by the baggw-inaster—the Infernal scoun
drel—andl • went home. My wife desired .
to tlike it to look at 'my clothes,-but as there
were some important papers in the valise,' I
said•she must wait:. _lgow, wheuevet I had •
returned before, she always took it fromthe..
when I Went in,in - rff,lvernan-like, she seems
lo :have thought there was a secret about the
gust as quick as my back was united, off
wept the.valise to the chamber, andluto it
!went my wife's fingers. 'Ten minutes later
there was a • seteam'echoing through the'
house that would have aroused '4, night
watchman frdm his dreams; I rushed up
' staini.und.what do you suppose I saw -- eon=
found the .bagOge-meri! There was
,my
wife stretched on the floor in hysterie4,'and_
there,was - my valise wide 'Open on the floor,*
and' showing very plainly .the following
table of-contents:—
_ • .
"An empty whisky b_dtle; two packs of
cards; photographs .of four young ladies
that ougut to be ashamed orthemseives ; a
lady's shawl ; a whole spothecary's'shop on
a small scale ; three dime novels ; two blood
and thunder papers; a' dice box; a -lot of
dice; another pack , of airdsl en old plpe ;'
and l l don't know kow much more of just
such trash. • I do know that the valise—my
'valise, was ful 'of just such traps, and my'
strife had seen hetu alt, and then gone oil'
into hysterics. -t - _ _
"I tried to. ring her. back to her senses,
but_lfshe came back far ,enough to open - her
eyes, she pointed sort of apasmcklically at
the valise, and then with a doubleyell went
off again... I te ll you I was mad. • I Just
walked up and down .the apartment, and I
cursed &blue streak. I thinkif I had met
that - baggage-man, then, 'I should have Hilly
impressed upon his. mind_ the belief-that he
had been visited by a collision. The maid
put my wife to bed, end I.went down street
swearing. When I came back the room - wat
locked,, and I was. locked. out. The maid
looked at me •as though I had been doing
something ,very. wicked, and the childien
slunk away as if I wanted to eat them—con
found ttug hatnpuretman.
"I finally got the doorof the room Opettiid,
and 'asked my wife what this all Meant.
She burht into tears and pointed at the
valise. And du< yolk know that it tookine
all day to make her bdileve that it was ill
the fault of that confounded . 4. :t .• t ,
who had gone and changed . .. r . or
me! I. could. not •do it until I bad. gong to
the depot and spent hourl in huntlng.up my
own baggage; and even then it tooklo new
bonnet and a velvet cloak to entirely dispel
the cloud which that baggage-man had
brought into my' house. - And what do you
,think he Mild?' Why • when It- told him all
the misery his earelesslesi had caused one,
the `e'low laughed and said. they lookel so
much alike!" .-, ' ~
=I
STANDING TREAT:.
THE CIIICAGO Poet' says no American
custom causes - :more genuine surpritie
and amusement arnortgAtavellng -foreigners
thariihat whicheis known in our saloons as
, "trenting•"—coasisting in. the entertainment
of two ornrore with refreshments for Which
one volunteers to pay. Itis a pure Ameri
canism; and all over the Republic it is as
Common as in Europe it is unknown. There:
is, probably, no minute of any day in the year
when two or.three brindiedeitlzens of Chi
cago are not guzzling 'soniethitrg stronger
than water at somebody else's expense.
- I*s-casual meeting of. tWo men who - have
ever exchanged a word together is wsignal
for both ; instantly to exclaim: "Come, let's
.have something!" and for both to dive doWn
into the nearest subterranean; cavity
the sidewalk. The one whir spoke first
usually insists upon ."paying the shot,'" the ;
word "shot being- a metaphorical refereneeta'
to the deaadly character of the contents
usually takeninto the stornach.,lf two old
friends meet, the regular thing to say first is
"Let's drink to old,times;P and the resident
must invariably "treat" the stranger. , If a
"an be well acquainted,, it is considered the
/Princely thing to seize upon all his acquaint
ances as often - as possible, take, them to a
saloon, and give them a 'complicated stand
up drink at the bat.
If there is anything. aliinrder 'than tnis
habit, we are unable to put our finger ou it.
Men do not always "treat" one anotherto
ekr_tieketa beCaulre they happen - Do meeten
the same seat.. We never saw a man take ,
out his pocketbook on encountering an - tic
quaintanceg and ray; "Ah, George! 'De
lighted to see yciu! Do take a few postage
swaps: It's my treat!" Do men have a
-mania for paying each other's board bills?
And is drinking together more "social" than
eating 'together or sleeping together? , •
4ftravler may gfi over the ,continents
Of Europe, of Asia, and Africa, without see
ing any man, except a Yankee, o ff er to
"treaV and-the Frenchmen are quite social
enough; but when they turn into a cafe .to
sip theitwbre, or brandied coffee together,
Ipacti Dian - pays for his own. 'When , two
Germans, long separated, meet, they wilt be
very likely to embrace, and then to turn into
an adjacent beer cellar, sit down and drink
lager and eat ..pretzels and chat, but when
they part again, each' man settles his own
genre independently. tio.in Italy. Theltal
ianiare proverbially merry and generous,
but each man pays for his own', Wlne,, , mac
airpni and cigars. They never go into each
irlher"s pocketbook in the asicred'natire ot,
friendship. They would as soon think of
transferring to each other their washerwo:
men's bills.
_
, The preposterous , fashlon of "treating" 'is
responsible for the terrible •drunkenness In
America. 'there would be ar: • little need of
temperancesocieties and little work for tbe
Good' 14aaplars as there ;is fn Genminy,"
France, anditaly, if this pernicious and in
aiduous habit was abolished. It is, take it ail )
the most ridiculous, the most unreasoaabk,
and the most pestilent custom thitt ever
its .tyrannical band on
_civilized human
, •
GoD IS just as Infinite for: the little thingi
life as forite.great ones. To hold that lie
Odle and "thought forthe honndlessly op
'er tive laws- of ,tils . universe; atid • none fur
I : ,aneh special nrovidenees turning the steps
.t:the little child out of the Way 'of danger,
sto limit Ills -power and to dlehcinor • is
The Divine hand that has built 'the
, towering cliffs Rm. the clouds to.ketienn',,and.
, has hung the shining worldain-impty space,
= Is the'iuuner that v eins the leak =and - polisbee
'the insect ' s Wing' Int& . the Ilues:of the rain- •
= how, and:measures into segments; and paints
;With delleatfilints, . the Shells so small that,.
`only, the strongest glass reveals. it to science
for athat - Ithie. . : .
is the root whereof lOve is the
d good. works the blossonis.. The
cost imid be hidden-.;; ilia blossoms silently,
7 40x.plimil f .. In beauty and 'fragrance, . 1 1 1:e
• strehM, of the .is kn the r
footled' of the flowers. ; Such. is sthe law of
Chrhatan lite. When faith is undstebtatiou
; displayed. ea the long prayers - of" the
Pharisees; set.up bn. high to be vilited by all
the sunbeams and ventilated •by all 'the
winds...while 'Works of charity and mercy
. ate Undbicoverable, the.Phaitla set In the
earth tipaidekrins. The .i leiv‘k ind the flow
ers are miffed - , and the - mote, Invariably with
much earth about them, are left in the air.
EIS
SINGLE cOPIES SIX CENTS.
O • ..
. OCOA -. to a valia,ablo, artlchliel food Ilia .
labecominginore mid More In use In this.
,ea natty, and Indging frinn the I nemoused im -'
Port:Wells during the past three or tour yeais
aniethis cotenant average at the cetb.e Un - "..:
Pettaduring"the same period, At seeing Unit*
- .ooceals, in a measure, displacing coffee . as a ...
popular beverege;
.. - lie plant producing the eoia . abfeet*Eneive -
issa
:tree seldom growing to greeter hght
than 17' or la fee te - It is known to
. botanists
as TheObroma Catao. ^it bears an oblong. ,
fruit, ribbed longitudinally.; measuring from
six to ten Inches in length.. and _four to five
inches abrosee and; when ripe, is of
.ayellow '
celisr, changing to , brown In dring. - .. ,
IL contains-from fitly to one undredseede,
and these ' seeds , 'after . being Masked; thor- '
:oughly dried In the sun ; and from '
the cocoa-nibs of coMmerce.:"t? .- . • '. • .
loinnteuis giust have hini allighiippreeia- ..:
Aloe of cocoa when he gaie to the genus the
name Theobroma',which is derived freln
' Mew, go 4 tend bremo; food, tolgnifyibi It. as -
food at for a god:, Cocoa - contains a large
amount of etitritktnietter. In:this . respect .
it' differs in a miiiiied degree 'from tea and, - 7
coffee . ; for while they are taken only In In- •
fusion and are used as refreshing beverages,. •
cocoa, is usually - takenn - more in tubitance.
end, is such, may be considered both as foo d •
'and drink. ..t . • '.- - • -
- It used In Item-early timed in Mexico,.
. Whence ft was introduced by the Spaniard* •
intoEuropeabOutleelli. Humboldt telisusthat ,
'ewes extensively cultivated in the time of •
Montezuma, 'and the seedoewere comnionly,
used as money by the . Aztecs. At. the pie-.:_„,,
- sent time thee two! . tree is largely
..e.rown In
the West I ndies i ,more especially in Trinidad,.
and ors great . part of tropical America.— . . .
.Numerous varieties of the • cocoa tree exist, ' .
some producing longer, or broader and some
! .thintier or thicker skinned fruits, others pre- ---
ducleglarger, longer,or broader was, as th e '.
case May-be. The seds aliso vary in quality,
according to the'veriety producing them, or -7'.•
the place of . thelr'growth : thus Camecas nd .- -
' Trinidad seeds are considered the finest,' and - -'
some manufacturers. use. - the ,names of the '
best districts' is a recommendation go their ,
_ The seeds are brought Into tills country in
a dried state; Wand are Toasted In reVolying
'metal cylinders, the ~ heat muses' them to
shrivel slightly, so , that the husks or ekieTo
are left loose and are removed
_hrrelinin& -= - _ .
- It Is said thatlarge quantities of these husks
areimpOrteiefrom. Italy under the name of .
"11Iserable," apd are used , in -Ireauid-by the
poorer classes:' . l The roasted . seeds; after 'the
husks are removed, are known ati cocoa-nibs, ~
but they are never seen iteconimeree in their .,
whole form. ' The seed natutally_ divide., by
its two cotyledons, and in the process of wink- :
Waling each cotyledon gets broken into two
or more pieces.- . 1 10 obtain the nibs and boll '
Ttbentin the old-fashioned way- is certainly '
the'surest way of getting
,getitnne.eoeolt.
- Some trouble; howeeer, attends the
prepa
ration of the beverage itilhis fora the n ibs`
requiring . to he boiled an hour or twold .ex- .
tract their valeable_propertiee.; To "obviate .
thiseand to supp ly the .publie with. a more • .
convenient article,. powdered coeoas, which
require simply ; meting with. cold milk,
bolll water being afterwards added, '
'were'. ntroduced. - These
. prepared cocoas .
openeda wide field -forwholesale adulters- •
tiott, the -public, by living them, sacrificing . ...
purity for t.vuvrinience in the. preparation for
the table. - `
Tese powdered coccus are "prepared" b,y '
red i cing the seeds to .a line paste. by grind- •
ing them tinder heavy heated'rollers--titarele
..' .
noon., augur, -molao see, and,. in the theaper ,
kinds other Ingredients _ less wholesome be-. .
leg` loaded ; a ft er 'which, the Whole noses is .
red eed to powder, packed in different forms . ,
anit
sold under various trade terms, such as .--.
"H mceopathlos - Cocoa,".- - "Soluble. Cocoa,".
otc.l ' Eaeh 'manufacturer's Individual prepa-. ..
ritho, n. varies in flavor, . according to • •
tiler Proportion: or eitametetof the ingre4.l!,
enure added. .. The •• ,numerous tom*, of
'cake chocolate are Prepared% the sameway,
vanilla being 'largely used in the flavoring,
.. :' •
a 1 he - pasty tires' bet n a messed intro moUlde
instead, of. being
_redueed to powder. Bock N
cocoa and Fluke cocoa are likewise prepared' ''T
int similar. way, but are not so hig jy 'Oa- t ' .
t
,- Ftwasrticies are More liable , to adulteration . „„
than' coicoi i and so, many forme 'or qualltietP . .4
are • nown in trade; varying laprice from tiot.,F.F - ';'- .
up o - 4s. per lb., that-it - la not surprising' thirtg '
in t 6 chea pest the adelteranfis thenFoir' - ';
selves„should be of the commonest and we t& ".:
deeoription.. if people •would only .troubjer
.theMselvee to think that ;cocoa-nibs whielri--,
are eimplygheto.,asted seeds withotif any tare-. „.
„..
pamtion, are retailed at le. 4d. per lb ~' how ..ii.”
eartithey expect to obtain an equally genuine ,'" .
article In a finely pulverized state; and peck- •
ed ih tinfoil and a . 'showy outwardeover; at z:
the same price ? which is what"the ierealled
"Heeiteopathlc" and similarly prepared co- , .
costs are sold .at. Expensive imaehineryj,in ~ _
..the [first .place, and the constant wear and
tear Of. the same, the.constimptioa of fuel in .
the :steam _apparatus,. and, the expense Of '`
• packing, heve all to be paid for... by, the con
sunier..not bY,chargieg hint' .aditeetly high
er money price, - but by %erelu h e bulk
... .
or weight of the artiele by ad .foreigu.. -..,
se
4 .
.subitances of a much cheaper d - [piton, .
and, which Is frequently!. done -in the coin- . i
- mover kinds of cocoa, bad or damaged seeds
theniaelves. There is one thing, to be said in
faverof our priecipal- cocoa Manufaeturenc: ' •
'that they: , seidoln advertise .theisepowdered
cocoas as genuine; they eithet leave out that •:
Important word sltogetherok call them "pre- '-: •
pared" ! coedits, and : this . word 'should
. - jse ..
borne in mind by these' Who wish to avoid .
the' prepared end to ebtaln the reel article,
end 1 are consequently ready -to pay a fair .
pAcis for
_such. If it is Impossible to secure. .
genuine powdered cocoa -at 18.4 d. per lb.,
still more impossible is It at ea., which is. the •
price paid by the pourer classes for an article:
called "Soluble Cocoa," Bold in} lb. packets -.
lid, leiell, and largely consumed by them.— •
Thevery fact of-its low price ought. to be ..
sufficient to tell us pretty plainly that a very , .
small quantity:of cocoa, and that of an infe
rior description, is to be found in such a pack- -
et: It contains a large amount of common
fat, the presence .. of which , can be detected
by smearing a little on a piece _0 . ...
f glass , . and - „
a
can be still more clearly seen on glass slide.
undet ' a .microscoPe. The id lim of fat
adds to the - weight, while Increase the •
bulk- 1 , - ii very large quantl of starch le added
'which' is the cause of t e -thickening of the •
beverage in,the cup. If te little of this so
called coco be placed On the tongue and •
rubbed against the roof Of -the mouth : it Will .
be friend to grate against ' the pala te , .
. Ind, .
moreover, to haVe a decidedly challiy-•or
earthy flavor. The spoon also gratis against
t the - iiediruent at the bottom of the cup,
clearly showing the presence or mineral
1 -matter. . -, . _
~.i . :.. . .
Until within the -last few' years;_ all these)
...
powdered cocoas were more or less "prepir
ed,".tio that pure cocoa could not be obtained,
~
in this, convenientform.. An article,
_called
ecetakEesence," recently introduced; has, • ,
Isowelierolispelled this notion. „We allknow
that tee-cocoa.seed naturally cOritains-a large
quantity; of butter or fat (about . ..le-per cent.) . 0...
which makes it too rich or heavy a berverag ,
for many persons, and this more especially. • -
when We consider that other elements of nu--
tition, such as albumen, are also pretient —." . .
to deprive it entirely of its butter, would by
hetake away one of itavaluable_Principles ;
but it is possible to hate goo much of $ good ~
thing .1 therefore, by taking away-about two •
thirde'lef the hutter the cocoa itself is not ..'
only Improved in a- dietetical point of vie*,,
bet the eddittom of sugar,_arrewroet, &c., is „-
tendered ramicelusary to take up otindance . . '
..the fisttY portion:. Those *rho wish 'for pure •
eocoit in a coevenient form should therefore
Obtain the "Cocoa Essence." It Is. sold Ili 3 '
Uziaknettlfloarto6dne-ceripch', each.- 'A
il u i ntlCe lP tlt 4 o4o- ts' '
inasopathic,"-_"Seluble," and other similar.'
cocoas; leis not mixed with milk, but with az
-410% bailing water, and stirred „for tesetOnd :
:or two until it is diasblved lutes floe paste; .
..s . • he cup is then- fi lled with bolling'water; and: .
t
ilk -and sugat added 0 please the taste: As •
' h r 7is q l e aru sin garti ti le. t; -" , it t ul h i"sed an uf a *resi n a y ‘tth o he f ell4 th liad e ta , ti so - e n:g r o l f led artil ire- go!
1 red colons, and as no starch entail Into he
0°6409100n, - the beverage. is 'as clear' as •
. t . 1,.
wetPstrelited coffee. It is quite asiOrtable'
as any of the-picket cocoas, and as 'easily .
, c .
mixed. Its extra cest, in the find Instance, .
. ii , lully compensated - by Its jtbrity,, end. by
- the fact that a - smaller quantity I...required
-for each cup. It is, moreover, a, proof of the ..-
extensive adulteration or thilio:kindewhiih
Ire retailed stir.'4d:or is, fid.,per. 1b.;. . . .•.
~-' To Lena an extent hattjhe public. to .
beeti led to prefer the flavor n ofinanY aftlter- :
• ated articl es that of the - genuine, :that we .
believe. agrmt proportion of those- 'who take - .
cocoa really do preferthe thickened moup.like
pm/ration made from the highly-lhivoured •
andiloctored sorb, to an infusion .of-ths• - pure • '
seedst.. If such people woUld.thlnk'for AMC .
. moment why and for what purtiosethey take „
this tor that. kind of food, and whine*: the. -
, progenies and effects on . .the system. Of the •
articles they are - supported. 'toconsimie, and
What thotw of the articles they - actually do—
consome,,.., 'Much better _ state Of 'things .S.:,
might be beoughtabout, for pending the ap
pointment-of a 'publi' 'analyst, the - head ,or::
eve rY household aright - make himself analyst --
to MS 0 .Tbi:Otlly * -- and-,so see that he does'
not get c - either in pocket or health.--, 4
Nature. . ' •,-. -.-• - : 1.. . • • !::
MEE
COOO4.