• , • _ _ _ --_ __.,.... - _ _ ..„ _.- - • . ft , zaa u,, , I ... - m •. 3 v il i i t i t , a 4 y:Mt A it v o T t _ a •:.e.1; : 1,44.::j ii . _4 0 , 9 'f 4 __.,,______ . , ( ll !;,.' 1 ', 0 gij (r. [warrrmi 111 Am Vi . e Sew/once "poor white twain-have won for them- The N. Y. , itnil Taint fat . qOaPesks of •_ igessiPlas=am noswomar „„, • . An, ' MilittrOl 2 e-; Ontita • J vanla Me- -9 A E fliti - wsslS.ZEtit Soeritite.rolB6-1,-,Asiniescrws- e or ' ache the noblest fame, the proudest position th e z ee i T ie d e i n th e t c ity, _ Ts Philadelphia.--: . - - - --- - -m- .--- •• • , i•S , '''`. .. Ma's r' • ' -it 11 ' , '"` 1 I -' --' •• wiLeitic.preith.r - --, - - ..mon g th., g rest names of the earth; and now comi ,... vi ,_- .- A ,, A , . E ....„.- 1 , ;I:a L im la t t NeaT n ork- . .......................... 41 ;ti. • - .4 ••i • - 451,25 W 2 00L . a3 T ti . s zionq lor..bincom._ , N prii n i nt i. 5 vi,.....-....- - .they are using the influence and power, which lir ma el ~ ,Y,T PP tilo - • ,)_ i 4- 2 ..f.' -,-4.-, 4 -, -',' -..-... , re-- ..,..,-__ __-. l'lwiwoo . 0 4- * I s '''' :Gad has co d iti their he l i x = hie rate their Thmestie, and pttesHis teed ilaatiwatd"' The in - lereilakeiieetesigemeitegersesrAletessasirial.' pA . On the Bthi.if NoTeMbei, - inelitattg the Sol:: We eari ppli*Acutemmet campai ti jo.,s ressw-crestares from the -..--- eof the trtsitlf- quiry for Hie East liatiftiliki - off_,42ootir ' .2164.khr` , To Peabelptdis.....:-..-.. . ..;;;Z« ' 1 441 03 POTTSVILLE, diem` rote: 7 ... Copperbeacle, inakCa note of f i cAr ras ' 1 :- 19 N•4 : a ri.:e i Te ‘ - 71" - a F il k l 'W , 4lnektt true g m4 -iiitt..&e,ellese ee t nt lieta,,,......„. ..?' We5. 114 01 1 44 1- Plf • - - - The - 4 4, 2 1 ; ec,udbeihindis.a.A T Newir , o4,' ....,,.- . . --- 11. 210 - - 0 - ~.. ,,,,,, -And t,.., ,is , 7 Dosten,..... - ...,i. ' --3 O W 25 is for-reference- after 2 - he elietion. !The Ile had 130 000 men beferellirashington well " a---1-5- ' 7. ':''''''• ''''''''''''': ' • = ebb hut* latteleargeterien this ft:taidne• maTIJIIDA.7I4 003V-4011111ties2; ;tom... , :this ' '• ' -a ' tad, well drilled and red Lir actlon.- r°4911111(1 97r119414 9° " 911.119°-44-494- 4 t . "I ' ' 111"4"11 ' tioins-'' se.k.rikuLic•Amiluorlina4flr-lsw- Union ( majority on She State - Congreisional ' l % /11 , 6 „, ed . the . re h e i,,, t ri la h • Walla and t° War a g ain kthe:JteHtlz -* I A,: '' • ' ' the 7 100 41 11 4•Asi l th•br s F-P ri 9 ea - arl '" an .— -''' Then) !owlet U fbe. in titr 6 ar r- ... _.--_,,-... er5 ,-. a te it.„, e B . . . . .• - , , ~...- .° W, . . -. _ p _IP -, 0 f;«, =liked ? Are there meirscrim iii 10 1. & _, I . ...-..' - , Lied ; e re ng.e• ai d -et- MOW 50es ever tee durmast frAze CaPl"' lll 4. - '... 1 ....e. at e e i_ ticket, includin g the soldiers Vete, teal reach the ri s er and fnghtan hue 4 h pinker gnus :. en dl e n t y . l e g- t o. i nt , , m ;„, ,, i ns :. - - ...eel ~,=-, 4 -_,. --- Ufa week _ erounglemenew , e2o344 . in um .. ; - . am ba obtaNeer-04 _lD.''%!?•• - = '-- .Johnson only developed ,- - st ... •by - retreat- ini a ih t .,, t h e r t menth y. iteedhe i t h ek . ha m . pert:l i n t :hi 46 , 4:4olancr:, - .. .• 4 . : _. m, •• • ' --, •' 4 . ','1.4 - --- -..-, , from 16,000 IQ 18,000. ' ''1,.,-,.;„„.. 199(1 EIKE& . : - , ; ,241210 R. .., , , ~ .. .. , ; mg, w h en fClellanyy br a'' , -‘ss ove by the °mature; their talandtheir - 9 111/ertiiBll,3o al fdleitansNovilloOtalkkaillet terms We did - ...„ - ....--Byn & - 2, - yeelee . R.32 f tele 20 „lain; 02 P dent's order He' . ` •' •40• 7 • Ranidan is, , -es-..14.._-- , 2mni et... ey • •" - - a " 6 SU7 'manta 4 expired ,‘„, • time.. -,,-, . e offered ..,....... e - ;. ••-.. L _ wkfte Later ,:., W 804,221, _ re 5114 ~,, Pa_ ,.„ ~.,..„ Little fi1einertk111........,..." , ~; .s GliXk l• rs w wl 7;;;;''' :- ' •-' ''' "TOElt STltlitil WILL In WITH AILOOD wiTri old 40 000 . t u '''''' - ' s - Ite ' Be.. - " e ''''"' - - ' 7-41 " . `"i) • 111 " f -Partkan- hate lied ~a sit leam. . ' . Mt- OStben•P -, . . , ne 32 '• ,i, - ,". MRS:11"" il, - - ' ' ifir Mail is- Rg.uscrirmiti• - • ,,,, : Y ad flerl ' a l*l - -... WE be/ strife. - •• s, i: , - r.• • 4 ~7.-' .- •- '- .s - ---1,0,en td bud, the; • m ew _ 1t11Lekre1e.......-....„...",,51,1415 01 , 404.int,5,06 LOUIS H. ROC •1! : .. .- ionne- it-eONRIL-Asnialmt- - , . ~„., . - --1 - - IfeClellim a fair flelf,CirfAtua„Biss. 'There X Z-L ., 4 , 4461. ° K- , ' , ,• ' i ng can... ;, )7 , #1 414:10:1!414 IFL*l#ll . 4lllltAOl4O hilitaoo7 &Mewl M5,.,. 7 . 11,335 14 , illa•aPS 1.8 g. R. norn o tt , L , , si_ _ . , We snot= :use to see tne ,uop were no fortieiestione_mealkee r ~ a shert„ A t tiein - fh e i e wth ne ki tse in f t h e Ner t h iler .. - • - have k - men.s ; v . l i 3int . thecommente ,„ . schromtvidtey - SAS 07 istisri Or -easy and safe line fronfillequiscreekarom whence ti cubuly anmeg the Irish portion, there is a sin- larran ,i ••• 1 - . --r- 4.: - c 07 ; ' '-` - Li. e - • PRTST IIO egg• P art C a r bo n ' ' - leeding , traitonii in this BorougliAmenhe DAVID PHTLLIPS. Mahanoy City, . • - - 5 .) -.- 'ha could more on Johniim's feent„.illan' k isnd rear gular„raisconevtion of ties relative positian of meld and - ifinpletion or the Boaa so aeon as sn iltelhayikill coal Timis for 1884., - 4 war. B. BENSINGRTemeeIis• mob that is to transf er : the Rebellion North geantitv of Coal Sent by Railroad awl Cued for the H. N. COYE,Schaylkin Haven. with 150 000itlitt 412 oots - d removed. - s men WI „4 ' , Ail rerne° free Wier as against, or-la eennection witleslave 'coal ePerstoter*Vs l4so /ders;): ll fiene of . week fin• on 'Thursday' emptier laet: his hair, end we nave ncit ?mai the 'imbject. elticida= . .'nehnylkill County talis - 10rtif fe - )titiple' capital „ at _ and cause the streets -to rem with blood M with 100,000 to the Peniipuls„'..-148 dividing e . . ,__ e n' own army, and enabling - ,Musa inieury to compute lied in Dion eansPalgassff.dmunennis-thcliii Fon pn i mun t eer. ease Lincoln is re-elected, as he Will oe, be' bt, • ed hi- liiiHW-**442150,-Littention ' against him three • -eAseistkiAtuts show. the most entitle' and powerrut ente of, t e _ eau _ ° ll ' ut _ -.1 , ,',', .... - - • pi:lA(l 4 am. 16,399 05 4531 0 0 ABRAHAM LINCOLN'. Sure as the sun will rise to-morrow. Why, .For no sooner yslic `'" ' '... ~ - mac be- Copperhead leaders have been from thfil tos build the line- ~.ptinfilltilt , , ? - asayalk Ie Tset- P o tt sv ill e ./ 204,45) - • 201e..00 fore Yorktown,"AugOahmea dna leagmelee - • 'a and hypothealil..- I.- --- •• • -- - •- - 85 rd crook, aryl t r i g oi rbi l ia s t p o omd . n ee di ng ntheyikin naves ....:,_,:. .... , . .... ion or 4;0 2 9 00 the women and children of this . Borough Huer's artehili,lnWilitligr, 1611(rolittida, - 'They lippeato the• in ne.,___d i 'n_d_ilces_ of noina d- oompany re :li ne '' -01,5-1--e•iny-',-.&,..—`11 over th ew - Auburn. 3.'364 et . . FOR TICF-PRESIDIOT, _ would whtp and drive off these cowardly ble wortith*illsAltreir_ - ;.'; J1(42C0140143) : the i,gnorant leborer, and talk - to f,hein wit , 4. Er ~ -•--•• i h . Port Clinton . 6,,080 14 Woo • - ' „etarneureg - Wl' S o u g h el elect Lincoln he wit the - ANDREW JOHNSON. traitors, who make such threabt, and who Sla.?JeS t;:I; - - .......- ,-- - - e at " . the _ • , branches on the 8110310.440;4144110 they carry .: their ; . . /11/X new a s- $ r 128 2 10,21 a 0 0 are afraid to trust their carcasses among their . ;But he * *olo. - S . ' , iiimidred . ' ..„ - Otttlffae igmi letiribt fo m rcea 4l to wo in rkaidc4 B° ly uth sid i e ll2 wi ll th " th iglil e " nagri nclkcal ” l ti be nt . bra ce 2,380.2.13 e 3 tra,su 06 Natioual fluky. Elects:Drat Ticket. t the best portione of the region,which the raisSest 3J, • theeiimpany will'extend briuiches through, , T o t al .. smi . a . ron-i-sl- friend's in the 614)11th • Bad as Breekinridge three A n n! :',4*-.l„inaNik,--,finki„Jting.:,--2,11e tiny will takethe "bread out of your mouth." C 1 . .^. d 5,417.544 05 lama a . earth works: alYtirktowa-' 4.- -. - , '''''.. l " 2, r' v -c.A . A ; ... , .., ;,,, :/ . dud this Iliad to be the Morton Iti'llichael, Philadelphia . My man than these Nor is, he is a far less gu , Here are facts Thistituitiot,liteidiernited, and •poor, iniegunied.mmi. It is ingeniously pnir, with _ METING OF CITIZENS . , ..„: . general bead . - pritheee •- Charter pees iheat„ . the pnvilege to o. Total To same thee 134 year-- 9,437,643 09 114:1,934 00 i T. Cunningham, Bp,aver Con ty. them , scoundrels who talk treason, but are caplet be explained sway. .s o'fl g urtr e t u fF ir we ll 14413°844- kV the head : C ‘X ertrill ' thrs ; in favor of a Railroad from the Schuylitat and Increase So ear m,Too 16 96,519 tel RKPMESTATITE. these argnmente app . ear pable to the pre- li v i,g e c oc a Fields ilirect to Sete Fork. . . ..., Demme eince the war has caused H Te . sct e, s e e i a l g.a e rte ns a, of Scbti i Robert P. Ring, i ts Elias W. Hale, afrai e such is plain military blunder as thee and no one indices of theAgnorant, 'd tO join and heln their Rebel friends ixt g lui g can find a- c°rner a exc n ae °r . P . twe " .a nd. 2 . Morrison Coates, 114 Charles H: Shriner , the field. They may excite their dupes to can fail see the error, for no matter what .ther 1884. I many of the ilnerated slaves to cock employnient • Columbia and Dauphin counties and others inter-Lehi g h.. . last. Henry Bumm, 15 1 John Winter , respective strength of the . oppos e armies might in the North. _ ested,in the proposed construction of ..a cheaper, , For weekending on y . 4 William H. Bern, 116 David IrConaughY, commit outrages, but the leaders in the towns have been; it would be still more a blunder. shorter and m ore direct coimenoriby Rail ;•Rolid . . •- - - RALMOAD. • CANAL. B artin H Jenks, 'l7 David W. Woods, will run, like their chi, Dold did in Indi- - . 5 H. 9 B 1 d ITAcCIe fit an ers. with the harbor at and near New York; shone t 6 eipgRATOl2 . 2. L_ _ . . i, ..-- 6 Charles N. Huai 1 - 18 Isaac Benson, ana, even before our women and children_with be colistmeteilby 'ms New York and Middle, - waxe • , ysyraa. wres., TOr4l. 7 Robert Parke, • 19 John Patton, There is one important factlost sight of by the 8 William Taylor, 20 Samuel B. Dick, broomstick& PreciOns scoundrels, to talk friends of "little ' Mac" when they:blame Mr. Lin the Pennsylvania Hall in Lehigh Coal Co 44 11,169 253,999 8 2 :, 1 1 2a n s 1284.4,727 493 . 9,, John A. Heustand, '2l Everard Bierer, d i cola for not sending every soldier from before 9 • 122 John P. Penney, about having the streets "flow with blood' le Richard H. Coryel Waslain' gton to dig dilates on the Chickahominy. ottsville an Saturday, October 29, at 2o 'clock ; P. tykesen ili Cci ne al ste Fi d eld ta ltail mee lto t ad at and Coal Company,: are re; A. Pardeel & o 0 4,913' . 4 9481 1,2540:9138 1,453 4;646 11 Edward Halliday . , 23 Ebenezer 31"Junkin, i n T Cage,/,ineCarl is re-elected ! Such is the When the army of the Potomac was besieging -12 Charles F. Beed, 24 John W. Blanchard. and floundering in the , rand of the Pe -90 Democracy ! Why, some of these miserable r Y l Firktewni . — . Idt. rieasaut 31,31 6,156 laid before the Meeting as 'well 00 o p portunity Wm. Milner ._: 548.9 r t0t,57 2.29 7 numbs, the Rebel army berom mciamona was r i fia ns ll : Ti bet; S-- h99 "" , teigs & Ce ` 'blood flowers" were so alarmed on ele c tion reduced to the lowest poesilibkaminbers' to rein- W. T. Carter • &Co.. - 155 Ve29.11 947,_' 21. 43 1' , . for the purpose of cons tructing 13.980 force Jackson in the . galley ' The - rebel leaders day at their own disgraceful acts, that they . ,„ . _ Smith% Spring _Mt... 652 33,2081 528, . .. were waiting and watching for 000 o pport unit y Eurd Patterson, Jeremiah Reed. tlasiaTm.ord°attedsaiofdtre7dnani°ter the eiti the YPmw a7 i n m bs ise ri ll"d p th t t l i l at o e ns rin tfabe stock Beavermesdaw...... . 62 140191 2,291 Maseyßrook. coal Co { 2,200, 114,406, 985, 24.198 .., begged the Sheriff to issue a procbtmation J. N, Boone Howell Fisher, -• ' Jeddo. 1 I,BlS' 97.923 1.4491 51.547 ~- to pounce upon Washington, and had' e Presi ..4 75 and appoint:fit - 4r ,police officers inTottaville, dent allowed McClellan, to uncover , Wiisliington, ....... -. 2 73 to protect ' these `iblood-floWers74:ooln 'their the capitol would have'been sacked.'"The army John Clayton, 10,,....„,ten Boone, ,„ ninon Coal .....,. - 1 eel . 31,4931 1,42 T 15.740 •• - .... eis 14 • . Pottsville.was neverso quiet 250 9in y conmenoeir of the PotomaoWould not only have been . beat- Thonias Hills, L..„,,krAuc t , r,, n i t , • Bailees 440 42,038[ 11746 '-'"aa• ' - ' 9 ''''' German Pa. Coal Co ' - 806 48,6731 687 -00 0 .2 50 and peaceablom when that proelarnajtkln was en and broken but the nation disgraced and per- George Bright, - Chao. atm. , see 444,5841 1,156 13,10 ~. . h ruined.. -- - Thus ve reason to - thank Id. Weaver, I°9 250 issued. and none bat guilty culpriti appre- u•Oe: sa that McClellan's blonde rs „Were to this ex- L. P. dirooke John S. Graham, • L . , t m. cal 106,736 - la ßuek nesv Mo u n ie n!it . ..1: 794 f 47,334 328 29,030 3 -'e headed” 'alt danger here. Valiant "blood- tent controlled by the President. • This the writer . Geo. Patterson, , . Other Sh pi pers,. .. • 427 13.738 306 2,88 T ..F 2 In 2 73 } 1 flowers," tun't they? - states from-poeitivelinowledge of the fa,cts. But said ethers. . ; i j :F .ll :l7er n'i . ee - ri: -D. Mummy, Jac- ... • . P- H. &W. H. 0.. :.. 2,162 , 49,183 , _ - ' ,.. 1 38 the events provethe assertions. Every one knowe Baltimore Coal Co ?AV 2 75 that Jackson was hovering like a ,hawk in the 5,657 .- ..... . Consoldated Coal cso .4.. Valley, watching for a chance to prey on Wash- Plymouth Co - 241 ... ington. _ I,— • ----- Total '23,655 1.161,146' 21,062 81t4T4 i ttl,o6e 61T,4641 Total by R. R.&Canal ,44,748 1,734,6T0 Same' time last' year.. 144.031 / 1.596,48 7 1ncrek5e.........1 . Tl 7 139.089, •,- - Decrease ... ..... ' A YAnjikililnoe N°rthuixtbernina' C .Trade " • . . RECEIPTX igr Subaerilitiossa to the Miners' Journal eines last • • ' Puhlieeth - on. . lust' Seltzer to Jan 1, '65....'.. • • • 42 25' GM H Wagner to Oct 15. 851' ....:.4 75 J Addison hicCool to Sept 7, '65 . .::2. 75 D J Hamer to Sept 7. '65...'... . '-. .. g 75 J W Davis to Jan 1, *B5 :..2'50 Mai - Kramer to July 31,'65 , .2 50 John H Ormsbee to Jan :1, 65 - .2 50 John C Cresson to Jan. 1; .65 .2 50 L B Anthony to Sept 10, *65........., ,2 75 t iro E Mara to Sept 10,'85 , .2 75 John Headley to Oct 11. .6.5 _1 38 ;sines B. Reed to July 1, '64 ..2 75. Thos Keck to Sept 10, .55 . ...2 75 m e i 2 C Robins to March 21, '65..... ...1 38 Wes Wetwood to March 10. '65 • ....1 38 lies Annie L Shearer to Sept 10065.. ....2 t'S F. G Behr to Sept IT, '65 2 75 Hoffman & Son to Jane 14, "65; . ... • • 250 sF Sherwood to Dec 27, .64., . 2 , : t. J Obrien to August 17, '65.; 2 SO Joseph Streeper to July 1,.64..:. 1 13 Ala Stellwagon to July 1,'64:-.. 2 75 Geo W Stellwagon to March 17, '65. 1 .. 38 8 Id Merrick to Noy 1064 - - • '• 2 75 . 5 Jones to Sept 1,'65 . . 2 75 .I F Petrov to July 1, '64 - - • 250 it W Thomas to July. 2, '65 • 2 75 Lieut. ,Eldridge Leian to Eopt,l7, '65. r: .... .....2 75 Union Coal Co tuAug 13. '65 • . 2 75 Petty Spencer to Jan 1, .65 • 2 75 Hinitn.Provost to July 1, '65 • 5 50 Frank Heisler to July 20, '65 ' 2 75 ;S Lawrence to July 1. '55 5 50 ' Geo J Behr to Jan 1, '65 2 72 Hunter F Bright to July 26, '64.... ; thn Adams to March T:.'65 ' 1 BR ii'm Hampshire to Sept 12,'65... ..-..2 75 John Ftelda to May 4,, .85 , - Bon J W Ryon to;Eept,.l7, '85.... .....2 75 211 Burlingame to Sept .17, , 65.• ~..2 75 1 W Chapin to Sept..l,, .65..... ...2 75 hales Taggart to Jan 1;'65..... .:.2 75 .hoemitke 8 Coto Sept IT, '65. ..9.75 gm li Williams to Aug 1, '65.. '..2 75 ieo. Kauffman to July 1, '65.. ~2 75. Webber to Aug 11 '65 .5 00. Yrs Mary Koons to July 1, '65 .2 75 TallaceGuss to Aug 24; '65:... nlor Hanry-J to Jan 18. - ,c) S Melot to May 1, '65 .n 0 5 .13 Williams to July 1, '65 rtes Dengler to Oct .l. '65.. t.lrk Delbert to Jan 1. '65 bred Sheets to August 1, .65 San Long to July r2,' .65.... hn Slotterbsek to Sept 17.'6S' L'atilda Brazier to April 12, 435 • •'m Thoinae to March 24, 'B5 'Tan Evans [To he conttnued next week.) ELECTORAL TICKET S For : the Presidential „Election, obe seat to the Soldiers, can be obtained it this office. We advise all those who have riends in the Army to . procure tickets and end them on as soon as possible._ Tickts also for the different Election Eris icts can be obtained at this office. Ow our First Page will be * found the two latforms—the Baltimore and cChicgo. The Jam . kerats keep their Platform out of their rgans; for it is the weakest and most pusil snimmul ever submitted to the voters of the famtry for their support. We also, invite .ttention to an excellent article on the re urces of the country by E. M. Mansfield, It contains facts worthy of perusal. bhn. THEY 31.13477 As-Trurs'ef—A. McClellan ub at Hartford has taken zooms over 'a cor n warehouse.' MctLat.w.a says he failed at Richmond for 114 want of men. He will fail at the ballot itoi for thesame reason. "WITEN Sjr►LL -WE Marl?! MEET ArIAI7.C.? The three districts. in Ohio now represented TPalcomi,roa, LONG and Cox, elect Union ~en to succeed them ! Thus do the people ig political graves for Copperheads. 310 four from m of ;,an TIIE GREAT Csvra►c FAIR.—The east' re ipts of this Fair for the relief of sick and minded soldiers, held in Philadelphia in sae last, amount to $1,071,343 311 Well one, Pennsylvania That is . substantial ympathy. gaud in , and salts iit est city, SR. Mt alai 3t7ißl9 AWFLti t THREATS. —The New York Vorbl threatens that the people. re-elect Ancoln they will have England ands.lreland ,own upon us and recOgnize the Southern onfederacy, -This is terrible! But the peo le here believe that they have had Irelend on ahYady, and they ain't frightened much liEtUTIVUL TAM COLLECTOR. —We are nfonned that the tax-collector. of Mahanoy Township, appointed by tho Counik .igsioneis, cannot read or write, and that on le day of election, and before, he refused receive taxei tendered to him, and give Peeipts. That_ man ought to be indicted.— he Union men there should attend to his Fog twen• coi one coPo. A rowilli Bobs. tbo of. A. Ihuve OFFICER GONE.—Major GEOCKIII .-B. Birney, the veteran commander of the enth Army Corps of the United States, died Philadelphia on Tuesday last, Of malarious ver. contracted while in the discharge of his ay in the Army of the Potomac. In his w.ll Pennsylvania loses a son of whom She as proud, and whose memory- she will re- MR. en. 8 6 kditiou. KO. 6•l.! tigistr I 'Nor , Soak by tbs Me Pet ITTS t Ile. s•tf IT IS a great pity that the copperheads of e Coal Region could not all be sent dovin a Davis's Government, and there enjoy , eir principles to their entire Satisfaction.— hey are a great curselo, the North, 'and be its their leaders are rapidly degrading them NI below the- negra, and many dt them have cause for.placing the negro in the scale !intelligence. . . lEss am,- g. r itble fo AN ecille tf. Tie Dn.reaascrs.—Gen. McClellan in his :ter of acceptance recommends an econbrn- l eximnditurc"in the Government. Yet this• to . meanly holds on to his office of Ma - 4 General, and pockets a salary of $BOOO a :ar,Widle he is doing notbin,g, but vilifying Government. Gen. Tremont stood in the me position, but he resigned his 'office of ajor General as soon as he was nominated 'the presidency. What a contrast = but Mac neier.resigns offices if he can help FOS D:* 'Elt• rod tar. Cosr or xnz "WArt-,The Copperhead iltnals talk about" the cost of the' war, as if 7 suppose they could humbug the • people IL WAT could be carried on gratis.. Every Fel Man not only knows that war is an ex !hive luxury, but Is determined that this shall be carried on to a successful ter- ►,l MN ?Ai • as of to P Sp - 11. lion if it takes the last garment • from cr backs. Only the Copperheads talk• now the Tories and Fedeillists talked loneago, use only Coppeiheads put dollars and is in the sale against their country. Tea Rebels sic' so anxious far McClellan's tenon that they are releasing .Union' pris m and sending ]them North, first exact.= a.propise that they will. Tote for Mc- Blau _ Deserters from our arralee are also t through our lines for the same purpose. 'arrest, the guerilla, is. now cenvitissiti,g‘Ken cky to secure a lirge vote there for Little. The loyal people will - thvrart. these lemes by giving Mr. tiricold• an over heirning majority., • • an— Ibe tt 00 , 6 t. 105. 0;016 4 lA rrii4l* gigt • 1110A 1 * lifite ASSESSMENTS..: ' ittuelay. October 29, will tie the leetol,o4..libtch a roe eau be attereil 'vole 'at the atild„efeciion iuithe coininglei- 141.1arinnber. trion.men remember dila; and nee tialhe na thr triers:3e of the great came ere placed on the Het& Ma. AtTucerr BExmoxr, the Jew, Chairman of the ,National Democratic Conimittee, and Chief Manager of "Little Mac," from whom he hopea to get the appointment orMiniater to France, if his protege should be elezted Presi dent, before the late - election in this State sent one chick of a lanulred thousand dollars to the city of Philadelphia, while his agents in the counties bordering on the New York State /ine, were busy distributing money to corrupt the masses wherever that means etas deemed necessary to carry a candi date. The money used by the Copperhead leaders, in the late campaign idthe State, was originally intended for disbursement in the South, to support the rebel arms; but was attracted from that purpose, in the hope that its expenditure in Pennsylvania would effect more important objects for the foreign hold ers of Confederate securities, by securing _a political triutnph.for the treason sympathizers in the North . . Their money Was contributed by foreign princes and bankers. Let the peo ple of Pennsylvania at the Noiember election show this New York. Jew and his foreign masters that the freemen of the North • 'ate incorruptible, by given a majority of fifty thou.- sand for Abraham Lincoln. = 2 75 2 75 2 75 2 75 .3 44 .1.33 .2 75 _2 75 .2 Trs .150 .1.55 .2 75 TAX PAYERS, Do you want to assume the Rebel Debt in addition to our present. .war debt; which' would more than,doubleit?' . -Do you want to destroy the Greenback cur rency, the best in the world, and thus add $500,000,000 (this amount Of Government currency) to the tax paying debt, which would amount to thirty millions additional taxes ptr annum, and hare the country again flood ed With all kinds of dirty, filthy, State Note trash, which are below par and are rapidly going out of circulation ? • • The only Surrender for which. McClellan is not prepared—the surrender of his commis sion. If you want the abOve*. accomplished. then vote for 31cOlellan for President on the:Bth of - November-next. • " . Bcciimum Despenims. —Peace Commis sioners .Grants Sherman and Sheridan, have knocked so many planks out of the Chicago Platform, .and the late election have 'weak ened its legs to such an extent, that the Copperhead Democritcy Is turning- its atten tion to the organization of responsible mobs. To effect this the Netv York News calls for the re-assembling of the National Democratic ConVentiort. The"leaders .here headed by prankAughes, predict that ,our streets will, run with blood, in the event of Lincoln's Con-e stitutional re-election.. : All that the loyal peo ple desire, if that game is to be commenced, is,- that the puissant Copperhead commanders will bead the mobs. In that event there will be more use •for hemp than 'there has been for years. MORE BLOOD FLOWING r ° The Copperhead member of Congress from the Roundout District in New York, a few nights ago, in a speech declared that if they, .did not re-elect him to Congress the streets of Roundout would run with blood. So It appears we are threatened.-by Copperhead sPeakers•with blood-rnnning everywhere; We suppose, after a while, if the peoPle do not elett some -- petty constable selected - by these leaders, the people will be threatened with' having their streets made to "flow with . blood, - "' yet. these scurvy would -be-traitors cell themselyes Democrats. WhAt, shameful mockery ! • - • • MCCLELLAN'S IDEA Eccixomr.:—Little Mac is fearfully exercised in regard to want of economy in the conduct of, the war. - Mae though, personally, las no such conscientious scruples. In two weeks, during - his. Penin sula campaign, he consumed with his aids, THOUSAND DOLLARS ' worth of wine at the expense of the Government: And now he draws his six thousand dollars a year— Major-General's pay—for doing nothing, not withstanding he is a candidate for the Presi dency, on the Principle, we presume,_that-" a - bird in the hand is worth two 'in the bush." The Major-General goose he holds, firmly by the neck—the Presidential _" quack, quack is flying rapidly away &pm him. Shrewd Lt - rms fellow, is Mac. National Peace pemocracy in Convention. A' Convention of about sixty Peace Delo. gates, from all parts of the country assemb led in Convention at Cincinnati, on Tueiday last. The delegates were bitter 'against Mc-' Clellan. It . was supposed that Singleton of New York would .be nominated . .for Presi dent, and Long of Ohio for Vice President. They sat with closed doors and refused ad mission to any delegates of the Valiandig ham stripe since his support of -Lime Mac, the hero of the Gunboat: • PENDLETON THE TRAITOR; And" Chicago Platform Candidate for the Vice Presidency has been repudiated - by the people in 'llia District, by the election of a staunch Union man to Congress - by ri` large majority.- The people will repudiate .the whole ticket on the Bth of "November next.— May such ever be 'the Tate Ortiaitors who boast that they never 'voted a man or a dollar to put down this Slaveholdef's Wicked -Re- SOLDIERS' FAmruss.--Mrs. Anne C. Ben son, . - President of the First Union Association of Philadelphia, for ‘ the Amelioration of Sol diers' Families Philadelphia, visited our Borough thisweek and solicited donations in coal. If any _of our coal operators feel•de sirous of contributing coal:p#.6llo purpose,. they can address Mrs.. Anna C. Benson, 504 Marshall St., Philadelphia, who will direct them how to send it. This Association is highlY coniniended I)st itie Prisii Philtulef- THE END (MEG. The Itiebmond Enquirer stunrnons all hands on deck. It declares that an attack on Itlelunond may be Msde any Morning; and that the end of It may be before the month dotes. They seem to anticipate the fell of Met. mond, intl . :shrift that Its fall Woriirtnally end - .. the Ri belliOn. TrIE REMARKABLE PROPERTIES of Brown's 'Bronchial Troches hare been thoroughly .teste4 since first introduced: 'The' demand for them has steadily , increased, and purely upon their own merits' they have found favor with thos e , who, 'from Pulmi nary; Bronchial,. Or, allartlostio -C9r.rt plaints reqbfre them, - rot cowl:Ed, Colds; Brun ehitis;Astlaina, -mid Influenza; they wre entirely ettiearions, removing all obstructions, and inereas ipg at once the power and-flexibility of the reit*, . . Engineering; If McClellan has any abiliiyeit should be as an Engineer, 'and, yet in all his -Engineering. in this war he has made nothing but blunders;' without referring to hbi.great. - blundeie as'ai•general, we will only notice'W.M. is a Simple engineer. • • - He attempted bridge the Chickahominy;. a low,siliallowsErearakand-thoughvast results de pended its • rapid'_construction; he was two weeks in buildinglt r and then hia"bridges were so low and badly bruit that a sudden freshet took them away, and a Wcit*Uswo watt' spent in, re constructing them. Now we Venture te assert that we could find a hundred common carpenters; or 'a hundred backwoodsmen that Would have put hp 'a better, andmore , durable 'bridge: in less than three days With t e means then - at disposal. Theßebels bridged the streams daring Stuart's raid around McClellan's rear in six hours, and during his retreat •a bridge was thrown across the Chickahominy in one night 'by Lee's Engineers. So much for-hint as a' simiEngineer. lint per-, haps. the worst piece of Engineering which he ever attempted :will be. as chief engineer of .the Democratic party:- • , . ''• - • .A Soldier's Reward Can any-of you remember the "Battle of. Seven Pines", fellow saldiars? Ah 1 I know some of you do, Vi ell; .who' planned that Battle ? Poor "Lit-. tle Mac" did not. But he inirtedthe rebel John son to destroy riearly.a third , of the .A.rmy . of the . . Potomac. . . You rernember, how : a third of our army was thrown' across the Chielcahominv, :with Couch's. and Case - y's.Divisions for its advance. Thepre carious stream ,with two unsubstantial bridges were betiveen.thein and the iiiain army. John= eon Was watching -for a chance. • - A -storm a'reise, and immediately the rebel General pounced with three 'corps on our aingle'corps. But fortunately for us the Rebel - Hager was as•usual, late ;- four hours was wasted waiting foi. him, and, then Long-street and Hill and later. Whitney cominem: ced the battle without him, but .those four. hours saveda third CA our amity. - The heroes of old casey f 'and Couch's brave men, two small Divi . slons. bore the whole force of the battle for, three longliours. But overwhelmed with mimbers they gave. way , when flesh and •blood:Could stand the rushing tide of battle no longer. But this brave, 'resistance held the army in cheek, until-reinforce meats came.: Casey, Couch, night and Hagar then saved McClellan from a terrible disgrace in, the,eyes - of the world: But was it less a disgrace; • because accident and bravery screened him: from the public 'eye,? "little Napoleon," -this friend Of the seldiers reward the bravery that saved his armyy•• 'How.? Why he disgraced the two gallant Divisions' to save himself from odium. ~He sent those brare'rnen to the' rear .lcilhout (flits; or shelter during a pitiless "storm. The poor fellows glided- among 'the ..pines 'with heavy . hearts and trembling limbs. Hive' you forgot ten this; 'ye Veterans? Soldiers Of the Army of the .• Potetnac,• • everywhere, that is the way, McClellan gives his (rewards for-bravery. • Thus ha dared to. disgrace -bravo American soldiers :in the . • • • : • . • . Who made -the War! The Ccipperheads and rebels charge the war on the AbolitionistS. But during: the` ascendeney of'' the rebel power, when 'McClellan's incapacity. and blunders came near plunging the Nation into ir retrievablernin, many of the leading secession— ists of the South Carolina School boasted :of the war' as'the work of their hands I . • . Duff Green, • J.' C. Callinn's - right-hand man and the ready tool of the Secessionists, boasted to the Writer in 1862 the he and a number that he named, hild worked for thirty years to bring about a separation. He gloried in his work, and lartsh .'ed at the folly of saddling the mighty conetTT: on the "poor miserable abohtionists. -He said that South Carolina was foremost in the intrigue. Her orators and writers had been industrious "firing the Southern, heart" for many years.. That . her • sons •govenied avers State in the South but three and the 'public men were busy, building rail roads, but not for trade „alone. They were de - signed'aa military avenues. He produced a map • made over twenty years ago, laying down' the strategetic points, and designing the roads since made, rnd we do say, from positive, knoWledge of the facta;that the Southern Railroads were.de *signed more ad military. roads than avenues of trade. And they t have proved the .chief aid to the _rebels, in enabling them to mass their al , This *fact' Grant sems to know; and he will make knowledge' usefuL • - . State Rights, ft maybe interesting to our readers as it may be also, to the public to know that WM. L. Yan cey, the' reat apostle of State Rights, repudia ted the doctrine of his party, publicly before his. death. During the Fall of 1862 Wm. L. Yancey, inside a speech a short distance below Rome, Ga., in which he not only repudiated the doctrine of State Rights, but proved by the most unan swerable arguments that it was impolitic, and. dangerous, to.both State and "Confederacy." He proved that under this doctrine the - more rmmer one the Confederation and the more powerful the States composing it, the more danger existed to the.whole and to each other. - That; ihthe doc trine. of State Rights, 'there is meither unity, concentration, of power, but the seeds of , disco tregation dissolution.' The writer Of this paragraph was there at, the time, and stands ready to make good the - asser tion. Yancey *as ostracised by the ruling pew ees, and forced to silence. .It. was his last public -speech. Rumor has it that he was removed 11A dangerous. man. This we doubt, but Ito was cer tainly a clieappointed'one. , Yet Yancey was and is not the onlyone of the Rebel leaders, who has repudiated, this doctrine. Davis himself, would be glad now to renounce it. Both North Caroli na and Georgia wish to secede -froin Seces sion, and of course, the doctrine is atill very con venient to them ' . '. . • McClellan's Pride: Every soldier of the army of the Potomac who served under McClellan, knows how exclusive and inaccessible he was, and they may remember too, • with less pride, however, now than formerly, the hundred and jiffy brilliant: aids that surrounded him during his vain and idle Ramifies on the fields of liaripten:Those twa.. precious weeks of inac— tivity that lost the crown of victory, and • ruined the army, But do they.knoir that 'Little Mae" and his hundred and fifty aids, drink $15,900 11 worth of.wine ! while they were drudging in the mud and rain before Yorktown. While they were tortured with •the. chills and levers; he was ea, rousing over his Wine. This, is, however, a fact, and the figures: are in the . War Department at E WRITTEN rOB . THE . MINERS' JOURNAL, RI ONE ICO HAS srzyr sziimAL TEARS IN TEE SOUTH.] The PoOr. Whites. • , • .. There are, or were, prior to the Rebellion, five millionapf poor whites in the South.. The writer has had better eppertunitien, perhaps, than any °titer person to study and observe those people.: He has employed them 'among the • "old field piece" of Virginia, and has become familiar with their "life among the pines" in North Carolina: He knows the, " dirt eaters" of . South Carolina, and-the "Toor-trash" in the canebrakes of Geor gia's-aid Alabania., and has often visited the houses of the "squatters" in. the mountains of Tennes see and ; Kentucky. - The larger proportion of theile people are miserably poor, ignorant' and degraded. They possess all • the vices of 'the negro without their virtues. They are passionate, indolent and prond, and are, therefore, poor; un lettered and slavish. There is no inducement to work; and they consider ' labor a disgrace. They cannot'-own land's, beca nee the. slave Masters monopolize All that is valuable. They cannot de pend on labor; because the masters only give the. ' poortraeli ” work when he : has more than his slaves can do, and only then at the prices of slave labor. They are at the mercy of the master, and it has been-his policy to keep them in povertYind ignorance. The policy of tyrants is,..to keep those they would , tute and oppress' in slavish daftness, vice and misery. - The' master' says, ”-Well, its' their own fault ; can, we helpit?" Yet they vehe- : mently. oppose all schools for the . poor. .They punish, with fine and imprisonment, any attempt to teach. their alaree, both white and black: They tnonopolize . all the valuable lands for fear of I,' agrarianism!" They look - upon, labor as 'dis -graceful. and despise all those who labor. They are 'therefore, the enemies of the lalaerer, and, the ophWiticif tliefilelloiii. . ;. .... -Those whobave carefullY , istridied the workings of the institution of slavery, cannot fail to appre date the snfferlirgs; of the - poor 'whites of the South ,r or recognize the, hand of an All-wise and merciful Preiidencti in delivering their .from their thraldoth. :Israel never groaneti in a more Egyp tian bondage..' The 'eye of. Omnipotence, never turned from. more , vice, cruelty; ignorance; and Iv 'human depravity-Leven in the arborrms ages; We pity the alive, but we have I t sight of 'orw 'poor fellow-whitemen, though th , require More of our sympathy aud , aid, for, th lot is worse thair-Att'Of 'the" negr.o._ .That t ay are the off spring fit better men'and inherit.the best qualities. of ourlact..., their brtriery on the battte,fteld testi fies ;" that -'they they are ssivr and con/Poled by their pesters ~we esnript deny.: bemuse they tight -against their' beet intermits. _But.' Heaven: las raised Aim -*along them fearless champions for right and liberty.% ...Lincoln , ttrut - johnson both spring froui Alio "poor whites:" :They indeOtIL- But how illiriThory and ridicidous imehAlimory arguments' really are, only . those familiir with . .the South 'can fully comprehend ;",but there:are some, facts. Which we can produce which ought to convince even the moat prejudiced of ther.ridicu- • lone character 'of thia Ttemocratie bugarlatio-• The liberation of- the slave world increase the area of free labor •- • and edd'to the valne of labor'. The glare master controlled all labor bathe South; both slave andfree, and all compensatimitar inch labor was on: aalavery basis; perisepiently;'wher ever -slavery existed, - labor 'was Muirtrably and..the laborer-was not only put on aiiar. with' the slave, bet - :deepkie..d by both muter arid alive as the "poor White trash.", We need not multiply words to prove this, since it is clear that the mas ter will not .employ free labor unless bailie more work than his slaves can do. In - fact, he seldom • does employ ftee labor, becalm he is opposed to it, and will notpay the poor white man more than his..slave labor costa . him besides, be fears to ' bring his alaVes in • .connection with white men-r -and particularly freetchite men. Indetidhe never • does so Thereforeotherever predominates free labor cannot exist. There it really " takes the - bread out of our month." -Vie area of tee labor was always controlled - by the slave-ocracy, and its extrusion was mentiv opposed by all the power of the slave ince ' ter.. this fact is too well known to 'need more *than a simple • :,statetrient. It isthus evident•that slavery is - really it. variance and in opposition to. the best interests of the white man, . and the greatest harden and drag upon free labor... . • Bat the COpperheads .say,' " the cure is worse than - the 'cause, that is; the emancipation of _the 'slaves would :•not change the condition:- How strangely absird I It would destroy the • wirer and control of the master; it would .throw the 'slave labor into the market;'enterprising mon would take , . the place'of the indolent master; labor would receive 'its due reward, and increase • in value 'aecetding W. the dernarid..• It would be honorable; beeatise the beet in the land has dig nified it, as 'a kofession. Free white labor could thus find an inviting field in. the South; and the poor whiles • there would riot feel it disgraceful to labor by the side of our noble soldiers, who, when the wars are Over, will not return to the.cold hills 'of New Englarid, or seek their fortunee in the far 'West. . They will 'return to those magnificent fields of the South which have been crimsoned by the precious blood of their comrades. ' . • How ridiculously-absurd' it is to imagine that the negro will leave the delightful clime of the sunny South; the warm and prolific fields that suit his nature sowell,to Seek a precarious living in the cold and wintry North, can onlybe realized by those who are familiar with both sections; Instead of the negrO.emigrating to the North, the result of hie emancipation will•be to send thous 'an& from inhospitable Canada and -bleak New England, and the North 'generally, to the general fields of a free South: -There the. climate amelio rates half 'their privations, and a -generous so 4 returns an abu ndance . to their labor. s• The South, with its unlimited field for labor, its vast.resources' and unlimited extent, has been .a sealed book to - emigration and to free labor. The poor Irishman could not go there witho.ut being as much a shwa atithe negro, and more despised. The industrious 'German could not find a free home in all the broad South. The thritty.New England farmer -could not make. an honorable. under the domineering slave master. But nowit may be different ; an inviting field is open to all if we do our duty to ourselves, our country, 'and our God. ": * • _ 'SPEECH OF THE PRESIDENT ON FREE MARYLAND. WASHINGTON, OCt. 19, 1861. To-night the President was serenaded, and .ap pearing at an upper window, spoke as follows, being frequently interruPted by applause:: "I am notified that this is a complimerr. paid me.by the loyal lilarylanders.resident in this Dis trict. I infer that the adoption oPthe new Consti tution for the State .furnishes the occasion, and that lu your view the extirpation of slavery con stitutes the chief - merit of the new Constitution. Most llearfily,lo I congratulate yon and Mary land,..and . the 'nation, and the world, upon the. event. Iregre,t that it did not occur two years sooner, which I am Surd would have saved to the nation more money than would•have met all the private loss.. incident to the measure ; but it has come'at last, - and I sincerely hope its Mends may fully realize all their anticipations'of good from it, and that itiropponents may; by, its effects, be 'agreeably and profitably disappointed. A word upon another Subject: Something: said by the Secretaryof State, in his recent speech at Auburn, has been' construed by some into a threat that, if I shall be beaten. at the election, I will between then and the end of my constitutional term do what I may be able to ruin the Government. Others regard 'the fact that the Chicago. Conve ntion adjourned .not ,sine die but to meet *again if called to do 80 by a particular individual as the ultimatum of a purpose - that . if the nominee shall be •elected he • will at-once seike control 'of the Government... I hope the.good people will permit' themselves to suffer no uneasiness on either point. I am struggling to maintain the Government, not to overthrow it. •I tlierefore • say ;that if I shall live I shall remain President until' the 4th of next March.' And. whoever shallte constitution ally elected, therefore, in NoVember shall beduly installed as President on the 4th of Mardi, and that in, the interval, I shall do my utmost that whoeveris to hold the, helm for. the next voyage shall Start with the best possible chance to save the ship. This is dne to the people l both on prin elide and under. the. Constitution. Their will, con stitutionally expressed, is the ultimate law for all. If they should deliberately resolve to haVe imme diate peace, even at thelose• of their country and their liberties, I know not the power. or the right to resist them, It is Weir own businesti, and they must do as they please with: their e wn. ' I believe, however', they: re all resolved- to . preserve 'their country and their liberty; and, in this in officer or out of it, I'M resolved to stand by, them. .I may add; that• in- this purpose—to save tht3" country and its lihertiesno class of:people seem so nearly. unanimous as the soldiers in. the field and the seamen afloat. Do.they not have the hardest of it? Who should.'quail.when they do not 7 God bless the soldiers and seamen;-and alltheir brave comniaudere ' • . • Ifew" noble arid patriotic this -speech sounds, and how truly DEMOCRATIC.. But what a con= treat, with the bendiest of - the mock-hero-cotc ard-traitora, . who threaten - that, • our 4 streets shall flow with blood incase Lincoln is re-elected. -To COnsuminives.—Consumptlye sufferers will receive a' aluable prescription for the cure of Cmisump lion. Asthma, Bronchitis, and all Throat and Lung At. fections (free of charge)-by sending their 'address to . Rev. EDWARD A. WILSON, Williamsburg, Kings Co., N. Y. 394 m 5ept. , 24. , 64 -THE: . O OAL'i.-TEADE‘ Pottsville, October:22, 11964.. The quantity sent by paiilroad'tbis ereek.is 37, 7 - 1 126 02—by . Canal 10,272:--for the . week 47,393 02 I against 9G,3R) tone .. .for the .corresponding week .last Year. . • , • - A few orders for'Coal'haye. come. in, and .pome of the-collieries that hid etopped., : fliave. started stein, and we prestunamcire will - etart next iveek. Prices-of coalare from $1 50 t 0,32 '5O per tonn - less i than before the,stoppago. The miners and labor ors 'We - learn. have so far - refused to make any're- . &lotion in the price ef. labor . , although •a. large portion of them voted in" favor of a reduction, *On the 11th Of . ootoher. these, thipc.i.conld. sue coed: in . elecling•4cOlellan . President; we will . guarantee that the present priets ;Cif labor would go down nearly cie•lialf before themiriter is over or the collieries-.would 'stop abtaost . entirely;—bui the'decrees Of Providence are againet:the - dupia , and they cannot destroi the •.Union;'or 'prostrate the business of the 'North:,-_ No thanks • however for the result to •theieignorant;:abdparly ridden dupes, wh o 4 . 4 . 4 the country;;; and 'also .against theirown directint4reSte,...at the. instance of a set of-as corrupt, 4nd!•forsalten . ..and lying political, knayearts: over cursed, any county, The trade_sums - uri , this...week.aa follows coni - pared . with last, year : • •. ' ' ictur F . l •64,862 1 .2„ 4 7.9,52,41 .0,9119.4 • 23357 1,041,471 20741 MAI • ..1&,438, 709.910 1 9,9131 .26C1,5.29 & R. Schnyl, Canal L.Nal. R. R. Lehigh Canal. Scrantm • " '•: Penna.-C. C. Brit Road.: By Cariat.;.. 'Del &Had. Wyomiitg So. . Broad top.. Shamokin—. Trevorton... Sti. Mt.....:. 523,910, 641,1651 394,160, b 2.46,0 1,9'1 264,607 6 , 4 / 0 1.,43•41 50,041 , ZW1F.:;10,492 2,013! • 46,45 6 ‘.„ Lykeaa Val bads shows-ft falling off again fot ths . weck sa poi*reci with that last ynai.,qf 44;571 inns, sllOf iihirl.h; and: too, is • from Beiiyl- -.• Our eerrihtportdent's abroad - state : th at there is 'some little fospro*entertfiri• the deiriand for coal . dirk% the.pilment in the stipply for. titZ : post; two . reehs; : Of 112i57.2 tons, '104444*: 'which .10as 1113.51 - A111;1i:5u !LS flgios. CaommumeAlaa.l Ventilation of Deep Mimeo No subject can , be more important • orinterest ing to our mining eom.uunity 'than that of ventil latiori, since every year adds to the, depths and extent of our mines, and consequently their lia bility; to all the deleterious . gasaes and other Ina purities arising froth 'imperfect yerttliation and its concomitant evils and dangers. • • . The systems !generally,ere*yed are, First "Natural Ventilation".-cans e& by free- currents 'of.air passing through the mine by the ordinary. !air courses, without resort to any, compelling for-.I ces. 'Second:"FuniaceVentilation," caused by ' the erection of furnaces at the base of the "up gist Shaft," in order to rarity - the .airand thus in- ' crease its velocity. Third "Steam Ventilation," cansedby the introduction„of ."steam jets" in the upcast shaft, for the purpose of increasing the draft on'the principle of "exhausting" the steam froms locomotive or stationary engine. into the stay).. Fourth':. "Fan Ventilation," on. the prin ciple !of suction or vaccuuin. „That is, exhausting the impurities of the mine and'replacing them by. pure; atmospheric air. in .any volume or current thatinay be desired. • . 'We have gifert much time and - attention to this Subject,. and havecollected avast amount otprac tical et-ides-0e from the actual Workingsof the va rious systeme where they are found in use. We have studied the operations of the Modes. in use throughout the. 'the anthracite regions, and have obtained the opinions of practical men whenever availahle, for the purpose of giving in the inter ested prblic,deroonstratire evidence.of the rein tivevalue and economy'of ventilation: • • We find, of ecuase, the "Natural System" to be the_ beat wherever it may be available, but. this triode is limited to shallow, mines, or to, those gen erally above water level, where the: urrents of air operate - in a natural manner, or by atmospher . - - ic 'pressure, from lower, to higher levels, and by the ! eon - anon temperatures of. the atmospheric strata.. But this mode is not available in deep and. !extensive Mines; ...la furnace ventilation is -now t most 'generally resorted to'. This . mode .is very. effective and reliable, where "fire:amp,"or coal;ges, does not exist in perceptible quantities. But- where gag' is abundant, in -"fiery" mines. :this mode; is veil objectionable; and we consider the cure almost as bad 'as the:cause:. :There, are several objections under such circumstances, but the chief objection arises' fromthe fact that ac- Cidants beyond the control of supervision oriman agement, occasiOnally happen to force the gas in explosive voltuneeback unon the yentila; tine- furnaces, in spite of "dutinivi drifts" or other preventative - expedients.. We could refer to many terrible. explosions and loss of life resulting from such accidents; bat the scope-of this paper will not edreit of such a diversion. We may mention, however, that an aceident.of this nature occurred "a, few weeks ago in the Lehigh Regions, at the od! "Room 'Run" or Nesquehoning Mines, where the falling in. of .some_ extensive croperorkinge forced an explosiye column of gas down the ven tilating furnace, and :caused alerrible explcision, which laid the gangways and • a great part of the internal workings in_quins. But fortunately— Previdentiallv we may say—the accident hap pened on ,a day (Sunday, we ! believe,) when the mines. were le; and thus, the liyes of a large ammberbf operatives were preseived• • We need not: multiply words to show the defects of this syetem: It is not to be depended on in deep, and gaseops mines. We must, there fore; turn. our attention to- some,inore available and reliable means of ventilatien, and happily we find it in theprinCiple of eacenum, and in the meehanical application of the Fawns! a cc:impera tively new means of :ventilation. • It is not, how ever,: an experiment yet-to be made, but its use has been demonstrated by practical operation in this Region during the last seven or eight - years, at the Lociistdale.Colliery, near Ashland. It was introduced *this colliery as an experinient, or, we! may say; as' an 'original invention by John L. Beadle, one of our most original and practical eri- • gineers, 'as long ago ae 1857-B.' It has since been introduced in several .collieries in the Scranton Region, and also in - this Region.. In all mks it surpasses expectation..- In fact, it cannot fail iu itsteffects. *hen properly applied. 'lt is tho only safe and reliable mode known to practicatexperi— ence. that is, in- every•respect, available for the' perfect ,ventilation of our deep,' extensive and' gaseons mines.' • ' ! • ! In regard to the economy of, erections: rid ope ratiOns,•We can confidently say, it is cheaper than the furnace system, and certainly to bo preferred in all deep mines to every other mode. We have purposely emitted Nnentioning. the "steam jet," as there aro so mangy objections to Ude . mode, in its general aPplication, that•we do not consider it worthy of comparison in' this nection. . • _ . • . . . . In our new work on mines and :mining, which we. are preparing to publish, the -Various systems of j ventilation will be practically considered in all their bearings, and the aPplication and modus operandi of each, fully and plainly set forth. We propose giving plans and diagrams, particularly. the Fan and iteoperations, for the benefit of' the mining community. • , • • • This is an interestingand, important question, as we said:in the start, not only to our operators, but to our miners especially; who now live •and breate in an e "atmosphere of fir' inhaling .the deleterious gasses which sap the 'foundations of life, and shatter the, strOngest constitutions and insures premature decay. - A single accident from carelessness,athong a hundred careless men,' or from the •many—rmavoidable causes that all fiery . mines aro subject to; and death and swift destruc tion aro • sudden visitants to all. -This 'subject, therefore' deserves our earnest'coneideration.. ' • THE COAL MARItETS. -0:- PRICES . OF 00A.i, BY Tf1E.,0A3300. AT rHILADELPHIA.,_ • . - - Ocrroart 20. 1W Schnekill Re d 'sh Prepared; 8 . 9 500 Chestnut ' 50® • •". White Ash; Thimp, Steam - - Boat and Broken,... .... ..8, 760 -9 00 "•. Egg and Stove, - 9 00® 925 Chestnut, " . 7 250 750 Locust '"2lt. Lump, St. Boat - 9 'oo® 925 " " Broken • 9 00® 925 " Prepared • .. 9 00®9 25 • " " Chestnut, - .7 50®:7 75 Lorberry Coal, ' • 9 00® 9 25 Franklin (Lykons Valley), Lehigh Lump, St. Boat BrOken,..lo 00® • " Prepared,. . ' ... . ... : ..10 00®10 25 " • ... . ... 9 oog Broad Top, • 11 •ioaao 50 ' There is some improvement in the demand for coal, although the quotations are not materially altered. , • ' r • , Anthracite ..... CUMBERLAND -Large • , • =Fine.... . . 0 • AT NEW YORK. . • CocrosEft 14, 1864.. Schuylkill Coal by the Cargo by Canal.' Sehuyliall Rod Ash by Boat L0ad,...510 00®11.00 ' ".. . Chestnut, " " 8 000 850 • " WHITE Ash Lump and IL • • .• • Boat • . 10 00010 75 -• • " Broken and Egg. ...10 00010 75 "• --Chestnut - 8 0008.50 • .'''. .Stove 10.' 00010'75 IRRTGR White Ash; Lump ki.P.o . a . t .10 50011 00 "•.- Prepared—. .. . ....:10 50@11.00 " 'Chestnut - 9 00010 00 • _ onion Coal at Plizabotliport. . No qnotations. • . . . Lehigh Coal iit'Ellaitbethport. I..minp and Stove .by Cargo... .. ,10 25(010 80 Broken. and Egg• 010 25 Prepared . •" -• 25010 50 . Chestnut ..:;;•ii• . s fl" ",.:....: . •e0o„9 50 Delit.lik-lindoota . Co: II Coal at Windom*: No . • • . , Penaoylvaaia Co.' .Coal at Pt. Ewen. 'No quotations. • , • • 1 AB64' '....:.---...1 —,-........ -...--.....„. . 314-?.6 5 1,411,344 '19,701 18,279' 780,503 , 96,519 1'23,686 1,167,146 184,67 i I :11065 , . 617,424 '1•358,409 i ;,,16.973i . 111093 61.123 1 7,851•'.261,743 - 7,914 . _' 6,162 1- "885,911'.405;911 15.13101 :421,771.d99,139 18,380.. • 697, II -. .• -.- ..- • . • 3,67:'462:5316 875] ; 76 : 334 9,063 1 318,088•63416 7 4 023. 241M7 - 30,666 .137 , . 64,601. ..4,454 , ...I , 69.7 ',. 892 _ - .... . . 1 . 62,3361' 5,870 • ~. :. - . ; 2 : 7 %COAL' Fri g hts from ) Portland' • Vl . ® NewlWilibrd.• 2 50 Newport. ...1;; . 50 Norval-a SO Newbtuyport ; . .. ; ..3. 15 S 50 Alban . y • • SO .Providenco • -4.50 Taunton • •.:100 • . 113 Teasels and, TO- &late. 112,8941 4 . 1 31.4.4491 - ... „,"17941,2291:' '4572,820 • erifflete Sirens" New Yo r rk $ Fall Newport ' 1 .8 f r Boston • . Norwich; .f•• 1 3 : 81.1 I • Providence.. Norwalk . . , RadeW.'4'-.-:;":"."':;::'.... 1 38 ' Leath. .Salem' • • " ‘5O, I:=M:=9 [ocnnuecriro IVERELY FON.TUR miitatts` iocrenut..] AT BALTIMORE OcrinEß 20, 1864. • 9 50g 9 75 IGHTS. EPhittiata._ Boaton. • . : .... :. s 1.T5 New .1.021;i011; 2 50 New Haves . .. . 9 50 New York 00 Witahbvton..... 2. BO Rliode Island • t6O Hartford 00 Alexandria.. • 2 50 Dighton ... .. 2 50 Derby... -9 25 aid for the week. gliztebetteport. • ' Portland 2 450 - New London 160 Pawtineket... .100 : Tannton..4. 90. 4: I 50 'Portetn__ • . 9.50 New , Badtord.. - . . . . I'oo BBridgeatsord. port.: .. 2 40- : Albany.... .... . . . i 5 Phtegrore Coal Trade f0r1864. Amount transported &wing the.lastutonth: MONTH. 'TOTAL. 31,2//.04 131,948'17 , 8,914 11 88,749 11 23.1.15 18 1.70,695 08 Lorlierry Creek Swatara Unlim Canal Railroad NEW ADVERT' MENTS. 500 BARBELS mesa Roaendale Ceraentjugt recelyed at • - • • Oct. '22, !64, & . STICHTER THOTEIPSON.S..I Tan.: TAR . : :.—Pare Pine' Tar in Kegs. and Barrela at STICHTER & THOMPSON'S. Oct. 9.2, .64. - . . . riLEY?lit um WADS. Single. and Double 1:4 Water Proof Cape. at . • ' - • Oct. 22 r '6& . . STICHTER 4..TROMPSO2i.B. SINGLE and Double Tape Blastinz. Fuse, at . . STICHTER & THO3IPSON'S 'WEEP :YOUR FEET DEF.—Professor it o,lmstead's celebrated Shce Grease. Sole..&ei e., . • 069ber 22 'U. STICHTEtt & TIIOMPSQN. HEEDS • CUTTERS, at C • • STICUTER & THOMPSON,S. Or.t. 22..64 nREARS BLASTING PAPER; Lamp t.) II Wick. Blaking Bairels. at • • Oct. 22, 'GC " STICHTEH & THOMPSON'S.. LOU R. Oral n and Baled Hay, for sale by - A. &I:O:.KREIDEIt, Annville, Lebanon - Co.. -Address Annvine P. 0.. - Oct. 22, 0 64. 43.4? . DNAME* FOR 1865.—A Fine lot of DIARIES for 1805. Various kind,' just received BANNANni . Book & Stationery' Store and le at: 0c.2 . 1, • • EVE , O . . NEE TADDA OF ALL. DE R - nominations! for sale at lIRNIPS sod. ' for sale at -GREENWOOD • NURSERY; Pottsville, by, the quantity.. Apply, at the Nursery. . • N SEAISON.-Zight, Cheap, Portable' Step Lad - Iders, for house cleaning purperses. .Uaetul in every family, at STICHTER a THOMPSON'S: ' .. . Oct. 22, , 64.• . . . . 300 BARRELS best Wintered Bleached Whale Oil at New York prices, DIRECT FROM NEW BEDFORD, at • • • Oct. 22, , 64 . . STICEItErt dt 4110151PSON'S. • 20 000. FEET of Stone Pipe 'for draining purpaees:-amorted .sizes, from 2to 12 luches, at • Oct. 22, .64. STICHTEIt 4U.TiIOhiPSON'S. B: JULltid s—Mee. H. Voleninn, for- Inerly of No. 724 Raue Street, desires to see you at - No. 933 Morgan Street, below Woe, Philadelphia. . • Oct. 22, 454. . . - . . 43-3 t." • - - 0 .. SPOr n T po til riv lrN.. F FF, FFFg Powder. ripe Fa e . Sporting •• •. . • . • " Damond Grain Oct: 22, '64. • at STICHTER THODIPSON'S? BLOWING CYLINDERS, 40 inches in .diemetex, 30 inch stroke, and 100 feet 20 inch Blast Pipe:for sale low by. . • A. PURVES & SON, - South and Penn, Philad.a. October 22,'64. 43-4 t . • . . • Apple • Pear . Cherry Trees.. ..e.ONE. OR TWO HUNDRED • - Extra Sized APPLE; CHER- • BY, PEAR & PEACH Treem, a portion of which are in hexing, will. be sold cheap at GREENWOOD NURSERY; P ottsville, as they must be, removed; Apply at the Nursery: . ' nipprAror corm! 4416 E.— Puraaant to an order of the Orphans. Court of the County of Schuyikill,.the subscriber, Executrix of the last Will, 'etc., - of George Angus, late of the Township of Fialley, deceased, will expose tolgale by. Public Ven due•on • SATURPAT; the-12th day . of Novembei At 2 o•cloek in the Afternoon, at ttii Public Rouse of David LOMIBOO, in the Town of Donaldson, In the County of Schuylkill aforesaid,—All the right,il title and interest of said George Angus in his life term; of and in a certain lot, of ground, situ-. ate In the Town of Donaldson, in the said Township of Franey, bounded on the North by Railroad Street; on the East by lot No. 62 1 lafe . the, property of said Geo. Angus, now Sarah Angnii. (in the South by Maryland Street, and on the Wt by Swatara Alley.. containing in front 50 feet and in.depth 150 feet, wittia Ili story Frame House and Frame Stable; as late the estate of said deceased. ' • . . Terms and conditions made known at the time and place of sale by SARAH ANGUS, • , By order of the Orphans. Court, . Executrix, • - A. Dounsux,..Clerk: • , • October 22, .64. : 4.1-3 t OBIPILANS , COURT .BALE. Pursuant to an order .of the' Orphans* Court , of the County sof. Schuylkill, . the: subscriber,. Administrator of the estate of Dr, Pr:unify Palm,- late of the Town ship of Oley. in the County. of Berke, deceased, will expose to,sale by,publit vendue on. • - ; • .I'HURSDAY,.the 17th :day. of %familiar : Next, at 1 o'clock in the afternocin, at the public house of Margaret Koons, - in the Borongtv of Schuylkill•fia veri, that eertMn two story brink dwelling house with a commodious store room and lot. of ground, situ:dein 'said - Borough of • Schuylkill Haven, bounded and deticribed as follewa: By Front s street and along the same 19 feet, on the West by Ma ria Medlar. on the south by a 211 feet alley, and on the. east by Dinah "Saylor . . . • ' Also, the undivided one-third 'part' of a double two story fame, house and lot of-ground, 'situate in the Borough of.Tamaqua, on the north-east corner of Nes copeck and Rowe 'streets, and - described. as follows : Beginning at the saidcorner, thence along said Bowe street 50 feet. thence north at right angle -with Rowe street 104 feet 6 inches, thence north T 91.1 degrees,•west along the Wabash• Railroad• 50 feet: 6 Inches to said Nescopeck Vied:thence along the' Sarni, 114 feet 10 inches to the plate . of beginning ; late the estate of ' said demised • - • • . . 'Terms andtotulitions Made known at the time. and place of sale by BENNEVILLE GLASE, •• -Administrator. By order of the Orphans* Court; A. Donimax, Clk. .-- October 22, '64. • 43-St . IDIJRILIC SALE OF A FARM, GRIOT MILL SAW-BaLl. 'and .QUERCIT 9 he subscriber will offer atPublic Sale, at the .Seltz er Home,-in the Borough of Womelsdork Berke Conn- MITURIMit s the lath day :et Noiemhie next, At 1-o'clock. P. m t , of Bald day, A. VALUABLE FARM, consisting of 96 acres of 'groclnd in "a good date of cul tivation, situated in North: Ileidleberg Township, be titweena WotitelsdorU and Beinvillo,' at the Union Canal. The improvements. con-M' slat of Two ' Dwelling Houses, one. of . which is two story, weather-boarded, with a Kitchen 'attached. the other a oneetory weather-boarded Rouse for the ACtrist Mill , with three pairs of. Burr Stones and one lair Stone; with one &foot never failing water power from the Tulpehocken Creek, and - is considered one of the best glands in Berke County. Anew Sawmill with Circular end other Saws one of the best in the County. Also a Qeercitron-Bark Mill. entirely new. only'bitilt last summer. • . This is decidedly one of the most 'desirable , proper,. fiee In' the County, and-the only reason why it is of fered for sale la ill htaith,".and a ,dispesition: to retire from burrinetuil • - . . • If ; oot mold on said. day. the property will - be offered for rent--poeserelon given onthelat - of Apiir next.- • Tern* be Anode known on theV , of. wile. O&ober • • J r . ETTERS . ..Reataiain V . ' ' 4 4. Pe Popt 0fie,."1,10.,, g antedated -. is - .. na,. ro, :a o n b l vettat he n . iied M att s k et cla af ter Y there ‘ : 7 9l legars: l:ei thefa L ppLai ..P t el tn7st : a u: forad as the,date of 'this list, and pay one tentlor advert! ng • ' .If not called for.,within'ona . 4nonek. th . . . b e , sent .the Mail Lefter Office' -r. >7. -.!7 W P 1 : 139,0 i nt . . , Abn",_ririirth Jun ' • Gilbert `Daniel Magnealy•Pat •BreinuuiDominickGroaa W &Co Mulligan_ Mews Brennen John; Graham Neat Marcrolt. Mrs W J Bermingham M . ; " Gregory•Eather . Melany. MTh Mary Beechen Swan rieallial Jacob - • Boswell , „Bolin= Sophia "• Maguire Mrs Ellen Broadriek Ann • Unbley Amefa , .MarlandEridget Bowman Mrs NeleKoller W S Mclnery Oittut - Barnet Mrs SJ • Rene Patrick •Nixon Josbna;- CriptDß • 3 . 7Kanllman Clemen-Nangle Sarah A • Connor Thas - tine . (Molina Deng Carter.Alite • Kelly Mins Kate Cl`Onmor John Campbell Bridg ahLarer D ' - Potts Min. • -Clark Mrs SvmondLarch Wm ;lime* Patk Jo 1 1 '" Morrie AC: , • 'Etning John 711 Davis John!' , McNichiilae l lern Smith Mrs• Eakin Susan •:'Mntr Henry SalOit Emeline •• Frazier-3 FranktinliltOosien John Skelly Amanda.. Fuck Jacob MCNirley.4olll3 . , Shoallanors yry Jolla ~.W1141.00:9 vnomuJohn T on t** jairP'.-.9VitiinalGeoir 'WobaOne Wria rot Ward James - Wentz 'George Gideon ' Wilhal ea W . • Orr.. 4_l, 14. .• M. EiLLY3IA.N. .; 6712;„;;icti e - I yonicity 611 1 Atirintaton t latierie:-004- '4,,FrAg!cl.4 l 3. l FAKIxt O 4l9 l : 111 ,7 . griamehist, 4 , 4 ',elan! __ ._NEDiurNAL, .. - Skil!. 'Risen** . :Tetilmei.' ltelih — ''.. ~.. ~;• ':,, ~ t,-. ~-. 8k00hi15.:1".,'.. -- • ULCERS, . . SCALD: HEAD, -, ,-.., ERYSIPELAS. .'" :BALT 1111EHM, .- „' . RINGWOHIIM ..: • . BiliffEWS ITCH:: . . - Emptkens covering the whole body, ofloeg standing and most'bstinate in character; are qtdekly cared 'by .Swayne's ~ 1 "D. w AII-Healing Ointment"' .S . - "Dr. Swayne's All-Healing Ointinent:" "Dr..Swayne'a. AH-Healing. Ointment." "Dr. Swayze's All-Healing .Ointment" : ".Dr.: Swayne's All-Sealing Ointinent." If tie blood a Immo, denies the Osamu of all im . purities by nein the old-established 'and - wall-tried re-. "Dr., Sway - ries Blood 7 ing - Panacea." P 7 "Dr. Swayne's Blood-Pm4 ing Panacea." "Dr.-.&Rayne's . Blood,Pu ping Patocett" "Dr. Bwayne's Blood-Purifying Panacea." "Dr. Swayne's .Blood-Burifying Panacea." "Dr. Swayne's Blood-Purifying Panacea" Itileiiititiou tor . wring seriguis, biirnicerit, hip Jolla complaint; ulcerated sore throat, whlte",iswelling, dark " blotches. or .defects in the akin. 'bent. - ram Ulu. ' marasmus or wasting. flesh, rheumatic affective. pains . in the bones, dec., is without pandiel: 'no Weak and .:fiebilitated, or any disease of a scrcdhlogs nature, it is woe to do gad. as the' miry thousand teittimonials from all parts of the world' will 'prove;..nothing ever atacoveredean compare with it In curing that ciao - of disorders:; To be sue of getting the. pure and genuine Panabea; purchase directat the principal office of,'Dr. Swains de Sos. WO North Sixth street, Philadelphia, or .ut the Drug Store of lIICNRY,fie,YLOR, Pottsville. " WHAT NEWS P" • WILKINS()N & TAYLOR,: Would Inform the public that • ISS . TILBLISHMENT. .No. 10S1 Soutii . Eleventkfitroog. below Chestiiiit,THILADELPIIIA.• GOOD MATERIAL. GOOD TRDIXINGS. GOOD • WORKMANSHIP AND GOOD FITS. • , We have the: heat . . •• PANTALOON CUTTER IN THE CITY. Co - me and s e e • . . Late at CHAS. 8T01023 3; CO (Oct .15, 434 42-3 Xty 14, .64.. • 20-6 m . .628. WM -T...HOPKIN 628. IIIiArIitrFACTILTRER OF F‘BST CLASS Woven Tape., .1109 P SKIRTS; (none genuine ,unleas they bear our name and No,)Jor LADIES. MISSES A CHILDREN; of everytittength and Size. Whole sale and. Retail, At No. 6M Arch Street' - Phila. delphia. We respectfully eau the attention of LA- • DIES and DEALERS,' to the .snrieriority of styles and as'well as durability of "OUR. OWN MAKE" of SKIRTS they being altogether abetter, cheaper and more satisfactory article, than can be obtained elsewhere in this Market. We. use nothing butthe best woven tapes, Engliattsteel springs, with linen finished cover ing, and secure all - the metallic.. fastenings by improved machinery,—thereby preventing all slipping and becom . lug unclasped in front, • • • - • - Also, constantly in receipt of tall lines of Low Priced Eastern Made SKIRTS. SKIRTS' made to order, alt ered and repaired. • •• • ' Terms Cash—one price only.. • WM T. HOPKINS, • . - 61tS Arch St., Philadelphia. ItarFor Sale by Storekeepers generally. • . Octoberle, . ,", . • L AGENCY:--CArr. I. F. ICUMSTUS, of CMillersville, has taken out a license for the collec tion of Bounty, Back Pay, ac. Be is now prepared to • attend to all claims against the government. October 15, ..64 ' . 44-4 t.• A W HOSPITAL OPEN...-The Ho .ll mmopathic InAnnary of Philadelphia, - Corner 11th and Coates Ste., will now receive surgical cases. Clinic for Eye and Earl Diseases on Wednesdays and -Satur days. • A few distant patients will be admitted plication to the Surgeon in charge, October 15, $64 . 42-30 B. W, JAMES, M. D 177 :NEW AND CHEAP STEAM. PACK. The subscriber has been appointed Sole Agent fOr the sale of, the SELF-LUBRICATING Steam Engine Parking, which is used without Oil, and is soft, smooth, tight and clean. It runs from inch in diameter to 2 Inches, and larger sizes can be‘obtamed to order. It Is much cheaper than Gum packing, and will last twice as long. It, is .g,oiag into general use wherever it has been tried. For sale wholesale and retail by I .• ' B. BAN AN, BANNAIVS Bookstore DEPARTMENT COMMON SCHOOLS 1114m - riabairs, Sept. 30, 1564. TO - the School Dlrettorsol 'Schuylkill Co.--- GENTLEMEN:—Application having been made by the Board of Directors, of a Majority of the school districts in said County, stating their desire to increase the sala, ry of the County - Superintendent thereof,:yon are re spectfully requested to meet in Convention at the Court House. in Pottsville. on Monday, October 24th, 1884. at 1 o'clock in the afternoon, , forthepurpose above stated,' according to the terms o,f the Eighth Section of the. Supplement to the School Law. approved the Bth day of May,.18.55. • SAMUEL BATES, Dep. Supt.-Com. - Schools. 41-3 t EDUCATIONAL. ALL'S. GOOD! 1331=1 Sole Agent for Schuylkill County Octnber. 8, '64 Greet Reduction in the Price of DRY .GOODS EDWIN HALL & N 0.28 Meath Second Street; • •• " z • PHILADELPHIA; Are .now Offering their •Magnigeent_ Stock of SILKS. " ••••-•„•• ... DRESS .00DDS. r. • CLOAKS,.,. VELVETS, &C.,' -for below the present GOLD • We have also on hnnd, a late stock of • DOMESTIC'. 'GOODS', Which we'are now selling at a great reduction from the 'prices we have been sellingtbem at: As have bad the advantage of arise in the prices of. our Stock in the progress.of the War for the' last two or three years, we now ptopose to give our. Customers the - Advantage of the fact in Prices. • ' . • • • CALICOES lb MIISLINS, redaried, . • '• FLANNELS ,!b TABLE LINENS, reduced. BLANKETS and-all STAPLE HOODS. reduced. We respectfully solicit Irina the Ladies and Others, •visiting Philadelphia, an examination of our Stock. is which unsurpassed in Variety And Style, in this City:, -N. B.—WHOLESALE BUYERS are invited to ex amine our Stock- -EDWIN HALL it CO,. No.. 26 South SECOND St.. PHILADA. ' OetoberS, .6..4 • 41-2 mos • CARPI:4OM9; CIA.UPETINGSI SELLING • OFF 31y large and well-iieletted stock of firnmaelor, 3. ply, Ingrain, - lrenei!inn, Sailand Cottage cAIRPEIII, will be dolled out without regard to coat. • J. T. DELACROIX. -- N 0.37 O.Outh SECOND St.. above Chet - stout, Oct.. 1t.. , -40-4ml PHILADELPHIA. .1864.: • NEW . PALL GOODS, 1.864; FRESH ATTRACTIONS AT THE OLD STAND Corner EitATII • and a CARDEN Pala A.DELP.kiiA. _ - • •A 'splendid lot of PLAID SHAWLS, • • -. A' good lot of Black STELLA SHAWLS, -•- Long and Square BROCHA SHAWLS, IiOURNDIG SHAWLS, in 'every variety. Rich • Tnreaci Plaid., beautiful styles!:' Superior Black Silks, • • • • Plain and Rep Poplins, Excellent Clottts, Cassimeres and Sattinetts, • Best quality of Irish Linens, Crashes. &c.. A -fine stock of Blankets and Flannels, Balmoral and Hoop Skirts. Hdkfs.. etc.. etc., at THORNLEY CHISM , S, N.E.' - Cor: Eighth and Spring Garden Streets. Oct. 1, PHLLADELPHIA. _ . _ GEO. W. POKEROY, AGENT FOR LEONARD" & SQUIER, • Sperm, Whale, bawl & Kerosene OILS. AL& BOLE MANUTA6I:I7II7EB OP OVEN'S CELiMILATTO AXLE - - GBEASE.,, , OFFICE—Corner et - Union Owl Centie Streets, Pottsville. Sept. 24, .64. iCHENRY'• HARPEA• , . - tiLaiNo. 520 ARCH Streett,"Pri : •PHILADEtPHIA • • a laige stock of - - Watches, Wine Jewelry, Solid Silver , p e ti . ed ' • Too Seta, poone,ile4OrkoLldre. 'AMPS •Abila I , IIIMODEONIOI, from , the Y best manufacturers, and a general - _— assortment of excellent Musical Instrne 4 1 -:=E:M inents, are sold , by the nedertisped.— t I .1 Strings, Bridges and Screws for Violins, can also be furnished...• Instruments repaired at short notice, and on reasonable terms. • • . . • M. I.EIMMEBS, - Agept, ' Centreatreet, rettsyille. Sept. 17, .414.—t0 A SAFE STEAM BOILER • The.subscriber ie prepared to receive oiders,for the , " HARIUSCIN STEAM BOILER," in sixes to suit pitr chaiers.; The attention of maitufacthremand others tailed to this new SWAM Generatoiois combining ems' rential' advantages in absolute safety from destructive erplosion.ther, coed :,and durability, eeouonty facility of cleaning "and AranspOrtation; "&c., &c., not poked bI anyboller now in nse.. Thesebbilers mery; beieen in dally,operatiiih; driViitt the 'extensive worts of Messrs. Wm: &Hera & -Co.,' Sixteenth street and Hamilton A:rest:at S. W. Cattell's FactOry: Sifence street, Scbuylidll;eo tit GI - Shops Tre mont MITI. Frankford. • • . _ JOSEP W, WON, Ji:t.,,,: Washington Estild . liag,-• . t.II,V.JE'II-, Sept. 24 , 14.-304 f/ ; -, •r . ureenwooa. Bitractry. TREES'FOR FALL:PLANTING: . The.subsCtiber Liss a large lot of APPLE.: BMX PEACE', PLUM, CHERRY. APRICOT and QUINCE TREES. "Mao, choice WNW% such as vela: ware. Ccnicord,- dm.; BASPBERIEM CUR RANTB and OCOSEBEEMEB. by the Angle or (hand.; ty, suitable for Ftdlilluningi &this Nureel7l atMfeen wood, which will he sold. at , .nnatry-prices_ Bend in your orderi.. = d.-- B. EANNAN. MILITARY t DS - WHOLESALE AN to RETAIL, 3101811151111 ANN, 111110111. &IVO.; = 1116 4 1 1 " LAVELPIIIA Octiber 8,'64 .-, 41-4 t ....; . 4- • I 4 • Sat,rditicAlftthef #4;.,1481. WWThltMti trilON ‘Oll - gw!gOtigvio- - .4qApt ;:-:::: -- .,=1:4P.TIANT.'1,::..-- - -; r.-7. A Great Battle at Cedar areeki THE r EIENT I :OII,IIICL..KAISIIiItiZT" fetid • PLETIALY. • 11,01JTED. :. • • The ,Rebel Genm.): Mul'mtr gilled. FIFTY , GUNS AND. LOGE NUMBER, or P 85301413: _OAPTIIIItIi. Union Gepersd Bidwell Killed, , and Wright, lirover, and Biclro_. , On Wednesday Oen. Sheridan won an other , glorioiv3 and qlecielve battle at . Cedar Creek, soundlp whipping the able Rebel (len eral Longatzeet,wha had been sent with large relnforcenients to crush' Sheridan. :His offi cial report of ths'irictory is as follows : 'Citrus CREEK, - Oct. 19-10 R . M LlEu5. Ctrs. Gaiarr, Crrr I have the honor to report that rey_army . at Cedar Creek was .attacked ttds A. M. before daylight, and my left.was turned and driven in confusion, with the loss of 20 'piece's` - of ar tillery. 'I hastened from Winchester, where I was on my return . from. Washington, and found, the two armies ..between. Middletown and Nevitown, having been driven back . about four miles. I here took the matter hi hind; and quickly united the Coma, formed a corn-- pact line of battle just in to repulse an attack of the enemy, which was handsomely done at about .1 P. M. - • At 3 P. M., after seme•thinke of the cav alry from the right to the leftliank, I attack= ed, with great vigor, driving and routing the enemy, capturing,.acoarding to the last re port, 30 pieces of artillery and sliteen hun dred prisoners. Ido not yet know the num ber of my casualties, or loss of the enemy. Wagons, homes, ambulances, and caissons in large numbers are In otir possession: They also burned some of the trains: Gen. Ramseur was killed. • ' R. C. TAYLOR. ' I have to regret the loss of Gen. Bidwell. killed, and -Generals. Wright; Grover, and Russell wounded—Wright slightly wounded. Affairs at times looked badly, but by the gallantry of our brave officers -end' men dis aster has been-turned into a splendid victory: Darkness again interfered to -shut off great results.. • • I now occupy Strasburg. As, soon.as ob tained I will send you further iarticulars. P. H. SHERIDAN, 'Major General. At last accounts the Rebels were in full retreat rapidly up the Valley, being, with their loss of trains and artillerv, in no condi tion to make a successful stand against Sher idan's victorious troops. The official,vote froth all the tk)untles but five, have been received, giving a Union ma jority of 395 on the home vote. It is our ' impression that this will be about the major ity, but adding the soldiers' vote. ours major ity in Pennsylvania will be about fifteen thousand. • . SIGNIFICANT. —The rebel Vice President A. H. Stephens has written a letter in which he states that the right of secession must, be ac knowledged before the South will consent to peace; that things look dark, .and that the 'only ray of light"to brighten this deadly gloom comes from the Chicago Convention. The "ray" will grow to the brightness of the sun at mid-day when Stephens, Jeff Davis, and the of the traitors, learn that the Mc- Clellan Democracy threaten revolution if their -candidate should he defeated._ But he will ,be defeated sotailly that if the Copperheads revolt it will be against a majority and a large one too, of almost every State in the limo le not in Rebellion. What a happy timethey'll have, playing that little game! HEAR GEN-LOOAR ; The -late Democratic member of Congrcss from South Illinois, in a •speeth at Carbondale, Illinois a few days since made use of the following strong language : • • "I tell yon, gentlemen, when yon hes men corn- ing home from the army, it makes no • difference . , what their politics may have been, it they . have been honeß, true andfaithful men, you ;find that they would stiffer their tongues to be torn 0z . 1 1, 11 , the roots before they would lisp a wo rd in of that Ohicago Platform or the men who made They cannot and will not do it From the 48th Regimen; P. V. V. , • EDS. Idrirmis' Smuts : Ai much talked - . or election has "done come" and "done gone" and . ' the "Eiogers" have voted, no thanks' to the people . of Berks County. The total vote polled for the ,'Gov'ment" in our Itegt.. was 84, justthat rrairiber too many. I was astomahed that he received -so 'many votes. It was my opinion. .that he would not receive more than ten (101 at the moat, for- I was under the impression that our itegt: was 'go . ing to vote "to a man" just the way they are fight ing. Some Co's gavelvotes for the "Gov'ment," some R. Co. "G." did not give a single vole for. that party; all hail to Co. "G." I suppose .fie boys.that voted for "Myer" didn't do it rad of any ill-fecling,towards the Republican party, salami We hope not, 'but like the Dutchmen in. Berke County, they "voted for Jackson." There will not be so many as St votes,polled in the Regt: for "Mac" next month. • . We heard good news from Sheridan hist night. Another dscline in Chicago stock. Poor "old man" Early has been "knocked about." lately "like a borrowed nigger." - Since onr "foot-race" with Hampton's Cavalry, on the 20th ult., nothing etrange or exciting has occurred, and everything has gone as merry as a day after pay in Kentucky. The health nf the Rogt. is good. • Very respectfully • N.l3.—Yim will pletwie excuse - my formality 'in addressing yon, but I thaught rott'a have no oh joetions to hearing from the BOgt..and so I- writ. Am all' ight on the Eagle, and have been from Maine to Termr. - .. . •• : - A. F. From the 50thillegirnent, P. V. CAMP OP . T.TIE 55TM lira., P. V., CHAPLAWS BLUFF, VA., Oct: 17, 1864. • Enrrons Mums' Jousitai.: Our.CompanY, E, " has sixteen legal voters, and fourteen out of that are Republican. The whole Regiment went'Union, and it will do the same in November.' , The diens wondered why the Cops did not vote to give • us the right to vote •, now they may - Wonder why - we won't. vote for their candidate—Oeorge Before we will vote for such a - manme listen to ,a voice from. the mouldering bones of our comps=_ .nions in arms who lay on the soil of ,Virginiat'from those who have bled and died for our native coun-' ,try. They tell us to despise the traitor:: We do I. not want any more. traitors - 10 dommand s'• mare Yorktown. nor Malvern .Hills; we want no " - more wooden guns. . - Grant and Sherman,.t3heri dan and "Farragut, are our peaie commissioner*: and Abraham Lincoln-, our friend,-add our rival- dent for four years . Our Company having . been, in, several, engage ments you maybe'anxious to know the 'names of those remaining-. They-are as follows t - CaptanV—GEORGF.rEL'IITT , T. Lieutenant—Wsi. W: Moons, • • Sergeant.---Wn.wasi Clua.s ! tientss. Ginoo, al-JACOB J. Fixo. , ; , ' Davin SNEDMI. . Musician&--Nzar. S. McLoi, GEORGE ALLEN,. : r INFIELD Britairse. • , Palmas. AURICLE. • John Condren: - Charles Tritl2lo, Henry H. RePler, William Derr, . Daniel 'McAllister; Ta,cobleffries, James Manning, John Gerrer, John-Miller, . . Charles }anther, • John Miles, James Malin, : Thomas Nolan," . Eli Eees, -•- Thomas Steel, - Geo. Routlenbush, Joseph Robinson, Joseph Welsh, . - George Irving; - ' John Wagner, • Thomas Thomas, -• . Frank.'74mmeriiian. Yours truly, E. W. POTTSITTIII killrETß; NEW YORK, PHLT A tibIId'IITA V 1I eacioip. . 7 . `V.--; - - ens Wounded. .Izhe. IPeneasylvaufli Election. lizautat Fpuff,.DININT-DDI COUNTY, VA./ Oct.' Id, 1864. Corrected Weekl*An. the Miners' Joursi =ZEE Wheat Flour, extuthuolly,i Per barrel.: 'do do , do do„ p er • s. , do: do • extra „ per barrei. do. do ',superfine, . do Bye Flour, , do • do . • Per Buckwheat Flour, - do Nbeat,prime white,”; ' " per bruihel. do . do red.. Dried gearbes, pared, . Per pound. dy do unwired, do • Dried Apples, ' ,do Rye. •19 . Corn, Pn " 9ste, " Soup Lou*" I Pe ve as. " I Clow caie, Mesl " • Mktdlingii, " Totakoes,:-.:". Ray. ift ton. Vale cart Straw, Um. " SsIt:!"10 Tim Seed,.ll. Clover'! Tha •" • $ 1 1 7 7001 90 I 001 20 1 TO . 1 90 1 00 8.00 S 00 1 90 1 80 od 35 00 ou I °O ==l Ocireauu - 21, Mt. Ft.ors.L-I)eneand liatit,,44hOldera are fir•in in their,riews, The rehaterk - and - halters are buy-, ingg in . a* titian way at ,$9 75010 - for - superthin, slo:2sriplJ) - 50 fer exiFii,Jlt(itfi fdraxtra rata. • ily, and 1 , 121g12 pe,r,,i4i4 ; fdr . fancy hratulav to quality; ' ' • -fiutta.L-The bnYera.ue ea' for; about 'lOOO briabo!ii t227.op2aiuteroxid and prinle ,- W, instikr , * 4 . 44 Pehnsylv4t33 ro4U, •• whitc+. at frothei .'26o(422oiibushel. Corn is diei and low rr,; About 2;000 h'ushel bold at Ike-. aloe._ Oats are un -changed ; 2,000 buahel'aold at Ste, in the ' , I•St 11 ..12,41 Kit. rii.7 - 2 .. --- 2T an 80 40 n VI 24 28 26 28 09 " 18 12,.82 18•'. 20 26 .., 08 18 dos. tR , Chew,' " I Maim , • Beef fron hind.qt. J. ....f. iv ".44, Pork ; " Veal, Swat, Cuba... Sugarlionse, ..ortiorltico,• "'", White.' 4 Crashed. N. Q. yntp !,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers